JPRS ID: 9468 TRANSLATION ANTHRAX ED. BY S.G. KOLESOV

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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/9468 5 January 1981 Translation ANTHRAX Ed. by S.G. Kolesov FgI$ FOREIGN BROADCAST INFORMATION SERViCE FOR OFFIC!AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 NOTE JPRS publications contain information primarily from foreign newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency transmissions and broadcasts. Materials from foreign-language sources are translated; those from Engl ish- language sources are transcribed or reprinted, with the original phrasing and othe: characteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] - or [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was processed. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear in the original but have been supplied as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes withili the body of an item originate with the source. Times within izems are as given by source. Tne contents of this publication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitudes of the U.S. Government. - COPYRZGHT LAWS AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING OWNERSHIP OF MATERIALS REPRODUGLD HEREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATION OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/9468 5 January 1981 ANTHRAX Moscow SIBIRSKAYA YAZVA in Russian 1976 signed to press 23 Jan 76 PP 1-287 [Text of book edited by S.G. Kolesov, Izdatel'stvo "Kolos," 19,000 copies, 287 pages, UDC 616.981.51] CONTENTS AnnotaY_ion 1 Introduction 1 Historical Survey (S. G. Kolesov, G. I. Romanov) 3 Biology of the Pathogen (G. V. Dunayev, S. G. Kolesov) 10 Epizootiology (Kh. Kh. Abdullin) 41 Diagnosis (S. G. Kolesov, et al.) 65 - Pathogenesis - (G. V. Dunayev, Kh. Kh. Abdullin) 89 Disease Symptoms and Course (Kh. Kh. Abdullin) 95 Pathomorphology and Pathomorphological Diagnosis (A. V. Alculov) 102 The Blood Picture of Animals Stricken With Anthrax (G. I. Romanov) 109 Treatment of Sick Ani.mals (S. G. Kolesov, G. I. Romanov) 114 Immunity (S. G. Kolesov, et al.) .......................I 121 - a - [I - USSR - CFOUO] FOR OFFICIAL USE ONI,Y APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 Anthrax in Pigs (N. G. Ipatenko) 154 - Veterinary-Sanitary Measures (Yu. I. Boykov) 175 Biological Soil Decontamination (V. V. Arkhipov) 210 - b - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ANNOTATION : This book describes one of the most dangerous diseases of animals and man. Brief _ information from the history of the disease and its occurrence in our country and in other countries of the world is presented. T'he pathogen, the disease symptoms, and the pathoanatomical changes observed in sick animals are described. Much attention is devoted to the problems associated with treating sick animals, immunity, and veterinary and sanitary measures implemented at farms when anthrax appears. - INTRUDUCTION Anthrax is one of the dangerous diseases with an acute course. In the past it inflicted tremendous losses upon animal husbandry, and it often evoked mass illness among people. There were no effective ways to contirol this disease, and it was only after the pathogen was discovered that i.ntensive work began on questions of the microbiology, - epizootiology, and diagnosis of anthrax. Scientists answered them successfully at the end of the past century and in the first half of the present century. Especially great changes in the methods for controlling infection occurred after acquisition of anthrax vaccines, owing to which a possi.bility arose for preventing the disease. The vaccines were proposed by L. Pasteur (1881) and L. S. Tsenkovskiy _ (1883). Immunity was studied and disinfection methods to be used with anthrax were developed in parallel. As of today the questions noted above have been studied sufficiently well, but before we can provide fully conclusive arsswers to them, we must do further work to reveal, record, and eliininate infection foci in the soil. Mass animal vaccination alone would not insure total elimination of the disease, since the threat of arisal of _ anthrax among unvaccinated animals would constantly arise. Despite the complexity of the measures being implemented to control anthrax, its - epizootics have been eliminated from our coimtry. The present problem is to eliminate.known anthrax foci and discover those yet unrevealed. _ FOR CFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 Scientific research and practical efforts o� the last 15 years showed that the great and difficult task of era(a.1cating anthrax--a dangerous infection of the community of man and animals, may be complete3 suc;:essfully through joint implementation of measures by veterinary and medical services. The main ways to eliminatP anthrax are to vaccinate animals in areas harboring this disease, reveal and study infection foci in the soil and decontaininate them, and study the ways of the pathogen's spread, as well as a number of cther problems. This book describes anthrax control miethods proposed by domestic and foreign scientists. In addition ~o Known methods, it presents new ones being used in m~cro- biology as well as in the diagnosis of the disease, in the treatment of patients, and in disinfection. Theoretical aspe^ts having to do with microbiology, epizoo� - tiology, pathogenesis, immunity, and a numher of othe-r problems are illwninated as well. The book is i.ntended for scientists studying anthrax, and for practical workers employed by sovkhoz and kolkhoz veterinary services and diagnostic laboratories. 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY HISTORICAL SURiIEY Anthrax has been known to mankind as an infectious disease of animals since ancier.t times. It was diaqnosed in many countries of the world where the geographic condi- tions, soil, and temperature favored survival and developaent of the pathogen in the environment. The spread of anthrax in those distant times was promoted by development of states and nations, by migrations of people and animals over great - distances, by growth in the strength of ties between states, and by wars. A disease with symptoms recalling anthrax ?.s even described in the Bible. It was observed among animals as well as people as a carbuncular disease. A disease having clinical signs recalliny anthrax was also observed in Ancient Greece. Thus in the "Iliad" (Book 1) Homer describes a disease that arose in the Greek encampment during the seiqe of Troy in 1218 B.C.; it first infected mules and dogs, and then people. A similar disease is mentioned in the works nf Hippocrates - (460-377 B.C.). According to him the island of Aegina suffered very strongly from " this disease in 1295 B.C., as did the Thessalian city of Kranok in 430 B.C. Nor was anthrax a rare phenomenon in Ancient Rome. Many historians ana poets of this country described it under various names. Plutarch wrote that violent out- breaks occurring during the time of Romulus killed animals and people very quickly. = Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Titus Livius asserted that it wrecked cruel havoc amonq farm animals and caused the death of large numbers of people in 463, 453, and 452 B.C.. Titus Livius reported a disease which arose first among animals and then infected people in 433, 428, 400 and 175 B.C..: Pliny the Elder (Gaius Secundus) - mentioned a carbuncular epidemic in Italy in 163 B.C., and he believed that the _ disease had been imported there with woolen goods from the Narbonne district (Southern Gaul); Cato, Var�ro, and Lucretius called the disease sacred, or volatile, fire (ignis sacer). It was also described by Aulus Cornelius Celsus, who lived at the end of the lst centuzy B.C. and the beginning of the lst century A.D. (S. F. Khotovitskiy, 1831). In his poem "Georgics" (37-30 B.C.), the RQman�poet Virgil accurately descri.bed a disease observed among animals of different species and man, leaving no doubt that the reference was to anthrax. It is also mentioned in other ancient writings. There are several mcntions of anthrax i.n the lOth century collection of veterinary writings entitled "Hippiatrica". In the opinion of some authors it is also descri.bed in the "Quadruped Medicine" attributed to the 11th century (D. M. Klemm, W. R. Klemm, 1959). - 3 , FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 The first reports of anthrax on Russian territory may be found in the Nikonovskaya - Chronicle (979 A.D.), which indicates that many doriestic and wild animals as well as people died. The Tverskaya Chronicle (the entry for 1158) offers evidence of the death of horses, cattle, and people in Novgorod. An epizootic recurred in this _ city in 1204. In 1284 epizootics caused ttle death of farm animals not only in Russia but also in Poland, Lithuania, and other neighboring countries. Many horscs, cattle, and sheep fell. Anthrax was probably among the diseases causing these animal deaths. J. M. Koropov presents interesting data from Russian chronicles in the book "Istoriya veterinarii v SSSR" [History of Veteri.nary Medicine in the USSR] (1954). Thus major epizootics were observed among animals of different species and epidc -ics occurred among people in 1309, 1374, 1375, 1443, and 1448. In 1640 the disease appeared among people, its origin being associated with removal of skins from deceased aniunals. The same thing happened again in 1643 in the vicinity of the city of Ostashkov. In connection with the violent epizootic in 1640, a Czarist ukaze prohibited the removal of skins from sick and fallen animals, and required their carcasses to be buried deep in the ground. It was decreed that violators were to be whipped ab- - solutely without mercy. Hence it follows that by this time, the infectiousness of the disease and the danger of human contact with the skins and hides of animals dying from or stricken with anthrax were well known in Russia. By as early as the mid-1350's quarantines were introduced :.ato the major trading cities of Italy as a means for isolating foreign vessels, people, and goods arriving - in the country for the first time. Beginning with the 16th century quarantine me3sures began to be implemented in many countries of Europe, to include Russia. However, despite the steps taken, anthrax continued to spread, and to cause con- siderable losses. It is evident from descriptions written by Kirkh in 1658 that the disease brake out among cattle and then among people in 1617. About 60,000 persons diec7 ~S. M. Derizhanov, 1935). There are ir..dications that anthrax spread through Germany and France in 1712; through Poland, Silesia, and Saxony in 1726; through many European countries in 1756; through Finland in 1758 and 1774; through Sweden in 1774. According to a report by S. F. Khotovitskiy it caused the death of 85,000 horses in Siberia in 1781. ~ It is interesting that even in 1831, concluding his hi.storic survey, S. F. Khoto- vitskiy wrote in the book "O sibirskoy yazve" (On Anthrax] that with time, the clinical signs and manifestations of "ogneVik" (anthrax) underwent change: In ancient times it supposedly affected people more, in the Middle Ages it manifested itself in the form of leprosy, and in the present more animals fall ill with it, ~ and people are rarely affected. That such notions are mistaken is obvious. 'i"here- fore in this historical survey we attempted to cite only those sources which provide descriptions of illness observed simultaneously in different species of animals and - people, which is typical of anthrax. But all these sources were notha.ng more than passing references to cases of disease, in which case the authors very often described carbuncular and other epizootics with the general terms iqnis sacer, ignis volatilis, and ignis S. Antonii, treating 4 ~ - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 -:I FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY diseases such as human and cattle pl-aque, anthrax, and rabies as all the same. - Therefore m3ny reports by authors writing in ancient times and in the Middle Ages shoulc3 be treated very cautiously. It was not until the late 17th and early 18th centuries that the first scientific works appeared, in which the symptoms of the disease, its causes, and its occurrence were descxibed, and recommendations en the treatment of sick animals were even offered. One of the first such works is that of Ramazzini, who descri.bed an epizootic that dominated almost all of Italy in 1690- 1.691. He was the first to distinguish carbuncular diseases from cattle plague, but he did not isolate anthrax as a separate nosological unit. This was first done by the Russian physicians Abram Eshke and Plikita Nozhevshchikov employed by the IGolyvan'-Voskressensk plants of Altayskiy Kray. They presented detailed information on anthrax to the medical board. In his work, A. Eshke (1758) described symptoms of the disease in people, he pointed out its similarity to disease in animals, - and he noted its seasonality. In 1762 N. G. Nozhevshchikov ma.de a detailed study _ of the sy.nptoms of the disease and the c;,nditions promoting its arisal. Among foreign researchers, the first to offer a scientific description of anthrax was Moran in France. In 1766 he submitted a report on this disease to the Academy of Sciences in Paris (12). - In 1769 Fournier distinguished anthrax as a separate nosological unit. Other works providing detailed descriptions of anthrax appeared as well. In the 1770's P. S. Pallas observed and described it in the Urals, along the Irtysh River, in the vicinity of Ishim, and in the Kirghiz steppes. In 1780 M. Tomassen received a decoration from the Dijon Academy for his research on this disease. S. S. Andreyevskiy (1786-1789) contributed much labor to the study of anthrax. Following a 3-year expeditian into the Chelyabinsk District of the Ural'sk Vice- regency, iz 1788 he presented the medical board his essay "On Anthrax" containing a detailed map of the disease's occurrence, a description of the signs of the _ diseases, and illustrations providing animpression of the size and internal structure - of carbuncles appearing on animals and man (9). In this same work the author de- scribed an experiment he performed upon himself in the presence of Doctor V. Zhukovskiy, Chelyabinsk Governor Shveygofen an.i Judge Olovyannikov, in which he demonstrated the infectiousness of the disease and its identity to that observed in animals and man. By this experiment S. S. Andreyevskiy wanted to confirm the infectiousness of the disease and its identity to that observed in animals and man. Moreover S. S. Andreyevskiy is credited with the main role in defining the disease, which he named Siberian ulcer after the place in which he studied it, and in de- scribing the methods of the disease's prevention and treatment. Many other researchers continued to study anthrax subsequently. In 1790 it was de- scribed by I. Peterson, and in 1792 M. L. Gamaleya published his book. V. Kozlov _ (1795), V. Zhukovskiy (1795), and Pinyayev (1797) submitted essays to the medical - board in which they indicated a number of interesting ideas they had come up with. Thus M. L. Gamaleya reported the possibility for transmission of infection from sick to healthy animals by blood-sucking insects; V. Kozlov suggested the hypothesis that tiny invisible living beings were the cause of disease. 5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 It was the 19th century. Anthrax epizoatics continued to rage, and they were re- corded in different countries almost every year. Especially large outbreaks were abserved in West Europe in 1.803, 1807, i811, 1822, and 1834. According to estimates by (Delafan) more than 284,000 sheep were killed by this disease in 1843 just in the small province of (Bos') (in Orleans) (P. Lyubimov, 1867). It is believed that anthrax was brouqht into the USA by the first settlers from , Europe. Major outbreaks were noted there among domestic animai.s and people in - 1835, 1851, and 1884. In Russiar anthrax epizootics were registered several times in the period from 1807 to 1857. For example many deer, and even wolves feeding on carcasses, died in - Lapland in 1823. The disease also spread among cattle, sheep, and people. Dea',s - among just damesticated deer alone exceeded 5,000.(13). This situation alarmed veterinary specialists studying anthrax. Books were published by F. Uden (1807), Fr. Geyrot (1807), and Ellizen (1808). In 1823 Barthelemy managed to demonstrate the disease's contagiousness. S. F. Khotovitskiy's book "On Anthrax" was published in 1831, F. Shkinskiy's book "On Siberian Fire Disease" was published in 1832, and V. I. V:,evolodc�v's "Experience in Studying Epidemic - Diseases Among Domestic Animals" was published in 1846. These books provide an exhaustive description of the disease. In 1850 Davaine and Rayer found thin, cylindrical, motionless rods in the blood of aniunals stricken and killed by anthrax. In 1855 Pollender r.eported that back in 1849, when he autopsied cows that had been killed by this disease, he found their blood to contain "rod-shaped, very thin bodies, dense in appearance and completely straight and motionless." Professor F. Brauel' of the Derptskiy (presently Tartu) Russian Veterinary School conducted research confirmi.ng the existence of these rod-shaped bodies, and he described them in 1857-1858. As a result of numerous blood innoculations he - also managed to experitnPntally infect different animals. In 1863 Davaine proved the capability blood containing anthrax bacilli had for causing disease. He established that rod-shaped elements appear in the blood of sick rabbits 5 hours = prior to death at the earliest, and that it is only from this moment that the blood - acquires the capability for evoking illness in other animals. R. Koch reported in 1876 that the formations under examination were microorganisms which reproduced by division and which were capable of developing on nutrient media. He also proved that such cultures could evoke anthrax in animals. Louis Pasteur performed siunilar research in 1877. He obtained a pure culture of anthrax pathogen, studiad its development i.n artificial nutrient media, and established that culture filtrate was harmless and that the infectious element could survive in soil for long periods of time. In 1881 he created anthrax vaccines 1 and 2, which was an outstanding achievement. A culture of anthrax microbes was obtained in Russia for the first time by the prominent scientist V. K. Vysokovich in 1882, and in 1883 L. S. Tsenkovskiy pre- pared anthrax vaccines 1 and 2 and successfully corapleted sheep vaccination experi- ments, thus initiating brilliant research on prevention of anthra.r among agricultural - 6 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ani.mals by vaccination. Despite this, anthrax continued to arise both in Russia and in many countries of the world in the latter half of the 19th and start of the 20th eentury. Nocard and Leclainche (19) reported siqnificant spread of anthrax and considerable losses in animal husbandry due to it in France, Italy, Great Britain, Germany, Spain, Belgium, and elsewhere. They also cited data on the accurrence of anthrax in Australia and in American and Asian countries. According to V. F. Nagorskiy 643,303 animals caught anthrax in 60 provinces of European Russia from 1885 to 1899; of these, 517,924 head died. During the same _ period 50,473 animals fell ill in 79 districts of Geraany; of these, 46,898 head died. According to N. A. Mikhin (1942) from 32,000 to 60,000 animals caught anth.rax each year from 1900 to 1912, which is an annual average of 47,976 head. Sizable anthrax epizootics also broke out among reindeer in the country's north. Anthrax was also highly prevalent in the country during the first years of Soviet - rule, whxch elicited great concern. It was in this connection that the RFSFR Soviet of Peoples Commissars published a decree on 10 October 1927 ordering the RFSFR Peaples Commissariat of Agriculture to develop measures to control it. A group of scientific and practical veterinary specialists was created in compliance with a directive of the RE'SFR Peoples Commissariat of Agriculture. In 1928-1929 J this group implemented a complex of ineasures against anthrax in the Belgorod District of the Central Chernozem Province. Their work was published in the journal PRAKTICHESKAYA VF;TERZNARZYA, No 11-12, 1929. The obtained results were extensively employed in measures against anthrax throughout the entire country, which dramati- cally reduced the disease's occurrence. For example by 1950 enzootic and epizootic _ outbreaks of anthrax were completely eliminated. Following rehabilitation of the war-devastated national economy, the principal measures for controlling anthrax included mass vaccination of an.Lmals and implemen- - tation of veterinary and sanitary tneasures. As a result in the last 26 years (from ,1947 to 1973) the number of susceptible locations in the countxy decreased by a factor of 21.33, the number of animals falling ill dropped by a factor of 20.57, and the number of animals dying decreased by a factor of 20.1. However, the possibility that sporadic cases of this infection may occur does exist. This can be explained by the biological features of the pathogen, by its ability to survive in soil for long periods of time, and by our still-inadequate knowledge of former cencers of infection. In some countries of E;urope anthrax arises today only sporadically, and it apparent- ly offers no major threat. However, in some countries it arises periodically in the form of epizootic outbreaks. Accordi.ng to data of the International Epizootic Bureau, in 1959-1964 7,871 anthrax outbreaks were registered in Greece, 1,837 were registered in Italy, and 1,215 were reqistered in Spain. In Great Britain, 1,215 outbreaks of animal anthrax were registered in 1952, and 609 were registered in 1953 (according to a report on the work of the veterinary service). 7 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 Anthrax outbreaks have also been registered in Asian countries--in Iran, Turkey, India, Syria, and elsewhere. Anthrax is also abserved in American counltYies. Sporadic cases of anthrax arise vearly in the United States of America. Neverthe- - less data of the International Epizootic IIureau show that there has been a clear tendency for the disease to decline in the period from 1968 to 1972. BIBLIOGRAPHY 1. Vsevolodov, V. I., "Opyt ucheniya o poval'nykh boleznyakh mezhdu domashnimi zhivotnymi" [EXPerience in Studying Epidemic Diseases Among Domestic Animals"], St. Petersburg, 1846. 2. Gamaleya, M. L., "0 sibirskoy yazve i o yeye narounom lechenii" [On Anthrax _-,d on Its Folk Treatment], PERM', 1792. 3. j,Qmmr, Ye. M., VETERINARNYY VESTNIK, Khar'kOV, NO 3, 4, 5r 1882, p 105. _ 4. Zenuner, Ye. M., VETi:RIDIARNYY VESTNIK, Khar'kov, No 6, 1882, p 1� 5. Koropov, V. M., "Istoriya veterinarii v SSSR" [History of Veterinary Medicine in the USSR], Moscow, Sel'khozgiz, 1954. i- 6. Lebedev, N. D., PRAKTICHESKAYA VETERINA1uYA, No 11-12, 1929, p 1962. 7. Liviy, Tit., "Ri.mskaya istoriya ot osnovaniya goroda" [The History of Rome Since the City's Founding], Moscora, 1899. 8. Nagorskiy, V. F., "AVN," Book 7(Appendix), 1902. � 9. Palkin, B. N. , ZHMEI Vol 7, 1951, p 81. 10. Peterson, I., "Kratkoye opisaniye bolezni v Rpssii, nazyvayemoy vetryanoy i sibirskoy yazvoy" [A Brief Description of a Disease in Russia Called Wind and - Siberian Ulcer], Tobol'sk, 1790. - 11. Publiy Vergiliy Maron, "Sel'skiye poemy Bukoliki, Georgiki" [pastoral Poems of the Bucolics and Georgics], Moscow, 1934. 12. Rozen'yer, L. A., "Sibirskaya yazva u cheloveka" [Anthrax in Man] Kishinev, 1948. 13. Khotovitskiy, S. F., "O sibirskoy yazve" [On Anthrax], St. Petersburg, 1831. ~ 14. Tsion, R. A., PRAKTICHESKP,YA VE`FERINARIYA, No 11-12, 1929, p 978- 15. Shkinskiy, F., "0 si.birskom ognevike" [On Siberian Fever] , St. Petersburg, - 1832. 16. Brauell, F., "Archiv. f. path. Anat. und Phys.," 1858, p 4. 17. Davain, C. I., C.R. ACAD. SCI., Vol 57, No 4, 1863, p 220� 8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. 18. Koch, R., COHN'S BEITRAGE 2UR BIOIAGIE DER PFLANZEN, Vol 2, 1876, p 276. 19. Noc:ard, E., and Leclainche, E. ,"Mikrobnyye bolezni zhivotn�lkh" [Microbial Diseases of Animals] , St. Petersburg, 1906. ~ 20. Pasteur, L. , Chamberland, Ch. Ed. , aI1d ROUX, E., C.R. ACAD. SCI., Vol 92, 1881, p 429. 21. Pollender, F. A. A., VIERT. F. GERICHTL. U. OFF. MED. BERLIN, Vol 8, 1855, - p 103. 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 BIOLOGY OF THE PATHOGEN Anthrax bacillus was discovered microscopically for the first time by Pollender i;. 1849. In 1850 the French scientists Devain and Rayer discovered filamentous, motionless bodies in tl?e blood of sheep stricken and killed by anthrax. The same sort of bodies were observed in Russia among dead animals by Professor F. Brauel' of the Derptskiy Veterinary School (1857). He was one of the first to discover _ bacilli in the blood of a person who died from anthrax, and to experimentally re- - produce the typical disease in animals by infecting them with blood containing microscopically visible bacilli (vibrios). However, the significance of these bacilli remain unc3.arified for a long period of time, and it was not until 1863 that Davain canclusively established the role of these formations as anthrax pathogens. Thus 1863 is said to be the official date of discovery of anthrax bacillus. The rod-shaped bodies described by this scholar were named anthrax bacteria (Bacteri des charbonneus). (Delyafon) attempted to obtain a culture of the possible anthrax pathogen back in - 1860, but it was not until 1876 that pure cultures of anthrax bacillus could be isolated, first by R. Koch and then by L. Pasteur. Using these cultures, they re- produced the disease in animals independently of one another. Research by R. Koch in 1876 and by L. Pasteur in 1877 proved that vegetative cells of the anthrax microbe are capable of forming spores. In 1888 Serafini discovered that anthrax bacilli formed capsules. In Russia, an anthrax microbe culture was first obtained by V. K. Vysokovich in 1882. In subsequent years the biology of anthrax pathogen was studied by L. S. Tsenkovskiy, I. N. Lange, P. N. Andreyev, N. A. Pokshishevskiy, N. A. Mikhin, S. N. Vyshelesskiy, R. A. Tsion, M. V. Revo, Ya. Ye. K,olyakov, F. A. Terent'yev, and many other scientists. The anthrax pathogen--BaciZZus anthrac2s (F. Kon, 1872) is classifed as order Eubacterial2s, family Bacillaceae, and genus and subgenus BaeiZZus. This genus contains about 25 aerobia and facul tative- anaerobic bacteria reacting positively to catalase. The following species are most closely associated with anthrax bacillus: Bac. esreus sive Bac. anthracoides sive Bac. pseudoanthrrzeis (waxy bacillus), Bac. cereus var. rmjeo2des sive Bac. rmyeoides (ront-like bacillus), Bac. megaterizpn (cabbage bacillus), subtiZis sive Bac. mesenterieus Trevisan (grass bac*llus, also referred to in 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY the literature as potato bacillus), and Bcte. ptoniZus sive Bac. mesenteric,~u8 Chester (the latter synonym is often used for potato bacillus). They are all saprophytes with the exception of Bac. cereu8, which synthesizes an active enzyme of pathogenicity, lecithinase, and which is capable of e liciting dietary toxicosis. Bae. anthrac2s is a rather large (from 1-1.3 to 3-10 u) Gram-positive, nonmotile rod forming capsules and spores. It is encountered in three forms: a vegetative form-- cells of varying size (encapsulated and nonencapsulated), a spore form--spores en- cased .within a well expressed exosporiwn, and a spore form in which t.he spores exist in isolation from one another. Unstained bacterial cells in preparations maiie from the blood and tissues of animals stricken or killed by anthrax may have the form of homogeneous transparent rods with _ slightly rounded ends. The rods lie separately, or they are joined together into short chains. The number of cells in a chain of highly virulent strains does not exceed three, while tYzere may be more with strains exhibiting low residual virulence. Lipoprotein granules, located subterminally and terminally for the udost part, have been discovered in the bacteria. The morphology of unstained bacteria from cultures grown in solid or liquid nutrient media is similar to that described above; however, in this case the cells always form more or less long chains. Rods contained in smears from cultures of strains that exhibit typical growth as a flaky precipitate in liquia nutrient media arrange themselves in long chains (Figure 1). Bacteria from cultures exhibiting atypical diffuse growth in liquid media form short chains. The cells of varying length recall cylinders with perfectly rounded margins. The _ surface of the cell wall is uneven. In stained preparations, the ends of rods forming chains face one another; they are straight and closely clipped. Free ends, meanwhile, are slightly rounded. Some- times the chains look like bamboo reeds, the clipped ends of the microbial cells are sometimes dented inward, and they are syumetrically thickened at their points of attachment. Such forms are encountered among bacteria synthesizing a capsule - when growing in media containing proteins, or among bacteria reproducing in the animal body. The bacterial cell has a nucleus. The first differentiated nucleoid (nuclear _ apparatus) was observed in anthrax bacillus by F. Ya. Kitayev (1922), who defined it as a chromidial apparatus. He noted concurrently that the nuclear element takes - part in division of vegetative cells, and that it is seen in genni.nating spores. Later the existence of aformed nucleus in anthrax bacillus was confirmed by Flewett (1948). 11 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 e Figure 1. Vegetative Cells From Broth Culture: Luminescent microscopy. ML-2 microscope. NINF-10. Objective 95 x1.25; ocular photo 012.5 x. In 1952 M. N. Meysel' and L. V. Mirolyubova reported that the nucleus of vaccine anthrax strains has the form of helical strands occupying the central part of the cell and arranged along its axi.s. According to Chatterjee and Williams (1962) the chromatin bodies of cells in young cultures were long, continuous formations located centrally. Both continuous and dividing nucleoids were present in mature cells. Long chromatin bodies in cells in 24-hour cult.ires arranged themselves as large complexes consisting of spherical formations. Using cytochemical tests, the above authors concluded that RNP, is associated with the cytoplasm of the bacterial cell whiZe DNA is associated with the nucleoids, and - that anthrax bacillus possesses a differentiated, discrete nucleoid. G. V. Dunayev (1967, 1972) also discovered a differentiated nucleoid in vegetative cells from Tsenkovskiy and STI-1 No 2 vaccine strains fixed and stained by the - classical Pekarskiy-Robinou method. Vegetative anthrax bacillus cells cantain a clearly outlined nucleoid in all phases of development of the bacterial culture. - The nuclear structure is revealed especially clearly when luminescent and phase- contrast microscopy are combined. Mesosomes (equivalent to mitochondria) have also been discovered in anthrax bacillus. These organoids are polyfunctional. Z'he membrane-mesosome system in bacteria is not only responsible for oxidative phosphorylation, electron transport, and the di- and tricarboxylic acid cycles, but it is also involved in protein synthesis (G. I. Burd, 1967; Rose, 1968). 12 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLX APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY The mesosomes of vegetative anthrax bacillus cells are clearly outlined, bright yellow-green granules in direct contact with the cytoplasmic membrane. Various inclusions are seen in the cytoplasm of vegetative anthrax bacillus cells. Volutin granules staining metachromatically may be found at the poles of the bacteria and sometimes at their center when they are stained by Loeffler's method, which in- volves holding the bacteria for some time in methylene blue solution. Staining with Sudan black reveals lipid granules, which are especially abundant during spore forma- ' tion. They are encountered in spore-forming aerobic bacilli of all species, in- cluding among saprophytes. Hochkiss' cytochemical reaction to polysaccharides reveals small glycogen granules. However, they are rarely encountered among both vegetative cells and bacteria ini- tiating spore formation. The Ultrastructure of Vegetative Microbial Cells - Roth and Williams (1963, 1964) were the first to report the submicroscopic structure of vegetative anthrax bacillus cells. Studying ultrathin spleen sections from mice - infected by anthrax pathogen, they discovered elements of a discrete nucleoid i.n vegetative cells of this microbe. The fine structure of virulent (No 66, No 2222) and vaccine (Tsenkovskiy's vaccine No 2, STI-1, Stern's) strains of anthrax bacilli had been studied in sufficient detail owing to the research of I. B. Pavlova and L. N. Kats (1966), A. A. Avakyan, T. B. Pavlova, L. N. Kats, and Ye. N. Levina (1967), I. I. Belokonov and G. V. Dunayev (1968), I. I. Belokonov (1970), T. A. Trzhetsetskaya and A. V. Kulikovskiy (1972), and Moberly, Shafa, and Gerhardt (1966). 0 The cell wall of anthrax bacillus seen in ultrathi.n sections is 360-400 A, and it consists of three layers: two osmiophilic layers each 30-40 A thick, and one osmio- phobic layer 300-320 X thick. However, this wall structure is not always noted. The wall consists more frequently of an internal osmiophilic layer of greater density and an outer, moderately dense layer. Tt:e outer layer of the wall often transforms into fibrillar structures that spread over the entire surface of the cell (Figure 2). It is hypothesized that these osmi.ophilic fibrillar formations are capsule remnants. '1'he cytoplasmic membrane is smooth or somewhat twisted. Its trilaminar structure can be revealed only in some portions of the cell. It is more noticeable in lysed cells. Usually its outer layer is in firm contact with the cell wall, giving the appearance of a single-layered formation (see Fig;ire 2). As a result of invaginational growth, the cytoplasmic membrane forms projections into the cytoplasm, differing in form, size, structure, and location, and described as intracytoplasmic membranous structures (mesosomes). The thickness of the membranes in these formations is 80-100 A. They are usually _ simple invaginations of -the cytoplasmic membrane and appear as coils, ovals, and uneven lines. In many bacteria, the intracytoplasmic membranous structures penetrate - into the zone of the nucleoid, and on occasion they are bound to it. 13 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2047102108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 Figure 2. Ultrathin Anthrax Bacillus Section: KC--cell wall; Liki--cytoplasmic membrane; OCK--fibrillar structures of the cell wall; MC--membranous structures; H--nucleoid; P--ribosomes. x65,000. The nucleoid appears as an extensive osmiophobic zone in the central part of the cell, and it is not sharply delimited from the cytoplasm. The bulk of the nucleoid consists of an irregular network of fibrils 25-50 A thick distributed uniformly throughout its entire area. The cytoplasm has a fine-grained structure, and it consists of 150-200 A granules, similar in size to bacterial ribosomes. Ri.bosomes are often arranged in chains, forming polyribosomes. Clearly outlined vacuoles are encountered in the cytoplasm of many anthrax bacillus cells (Figure 3). They are often large, and enclosed by a membrane. Shape is imparted to the vacuoles by a membrane with polyri.bosomes on its outer side, which is especially noticeable in lysed cells. The vacuoles often concentrate near the nucleoid. In all probability the vacuoles form owing to _ dissolution of lipid inclusions, mainly poly-S-oxybutyric acid granules (Gerhardt, 1967), during fixation and dehydration. Cell division involves forntiation of a transverse septum, as a result of which two individuals of equal size form. Creation of the transverse septum begins with invagination of the cytoplasmic membrane, with simultaneous inclusion of the cell wall in this process. As a result small syametrically arranged identations oriented in the direction of the cytoplasm form. The next act of division often begins before cells have sepaxated following previous division. This leads to formation of streptobacilli. 7'he length of individual bacteria in the chains often varies. The ultrastructre of anthrax bacillus exhibits unique features during toxin bio- synthesis and secretion when cultures are grown in special media (G. V. Dunayev, 1972). 14 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 P u~,, N � _ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Ls.:'. ~ 1+U Figure 3. Ultrathin Anthrax Bacillus Section: B--vacuoles. x55,000. y A culture in its exponential growth phase consists mainly of entire cells. The thickness of the cell wall of such bacteria is 330-350 A, and the outer layer under- gces a transition into clearly pronounced fibrillar structures. Z'he cytoplasmic membrane is a single-layered formation 80-110 A thick with a convoluted outline. A high accumulation of osmi.ophilic masses can be noted within the zone of the nucleoid. Intracytoplasmic channels are revealed in some areas of the bacterial cells; they differ in their morphology from the usual type of inembrane structures - observed in microbes of this species: They are straight, short, and 110-120 JL wide, while membrane thickness is 75-80 A. These channels pass through the cell wall and communicate with the outside environment. Individual cells with a lysed protoplasm but with well preserved membrane structures are also encountered. Localized areas of lysed cell wall up to 375 A in size are often revealed in such cells. Bacterial cells actively secreting toxin are observed in the exponential growth phase.(F'igure 4). Inclusions of compact osmiophilic ` ' particles are noted in the cytoplasm of such cells. 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 rvn vrrtUirw uoz V1VL1 . R 1 a ~ �'w ; ~;.j~R": � ~ f~ � ~s  . ~ .0� Figure 4. Ultrathin Sections of Anthrax Bacillus Cells Actively Secreting Toxin. X39,000. , Outside the cells, the osmiophilic particles are contained in an optically less dense substance, also produced by secreting bacteria. As the particles get farther away from the microbial cells, they grow constantly larger, and the distance between them increases. Intense development of the ribosome apparatus and the membrane-mesoson,:e apparatus is noted among bacterial cells synthesizi.ng toxin; a close relationship is si.mul- taneously established between them, and intracytoplasmic membrane structures penetrate into the nucleoid zone. When the microbial population is in its stable growth phase, cells are encountered with individual portions of the cell wall destroyed (local lysis), and it is through these breaks that a structure taking the form of fibrillar-granular osmio- philic material contained in the cytoplasm is secreted. There are no noticeable - differences in the fine structure of vegetative cells of virulent and vaccine anthrax strains. Microbe Staining Methods - Anthrax pathogen is stained intensively by alcohol-water solutions of the principal aniline dyes broadly employed in bacterial staining. Smears and impressions of the tissues of dead ani.mals and blood smears stain very well with Loeffler's methylene blue. 16 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 . r �r APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Culture preparations may be stained in 1-2 minutes by a 1:10 dilution of fuchsin (Pfeiffer's alcohol-water solution) and Loeffler's methylene blue. This bacillus (the vegetative form) reacts positively to Gram's stain. Negatively staining cells are encountered in very young and in very old cultures. This microbe does not have any specific tinctorial features inherent to it alone. Capsule Formation The Structure of the Capsule and Ita Biological Significance Anthrax bacillus fornLS capsules in the body of a sick animal or when it is grown in artificial nutrient media containing a large concentration of native protein. In- tense capsule formation occurs during growth in both liquid and solid seram nutrient media. In Gladstone-Fields medium, encapsulated rods appear after the third hour of incuba- tion (A. V. Mashkov and V. P. Bodisko, 1958), and by the 14th-16th hours practically the entire culture consists of them. Then begins intensified diffusion of capsule substance from the surface of the cell into the surrounding medium. QCI [State Control Znstitute of IIiomedical Preparations] protein medium is an elective substrate offering the conditions for capsule biosynthesis by anthrax bacillus. The phenomenon of capsule formation is clearly noted in anthrax bacilli also in their growth xn coagulated equine blood serum by Shaffer's method, as well as in serum agar, especially in a C02 atmosphere. Capsule synthesi.s is rather intensively pronounced when capsule-forming strains are grown in proteiri media used to obtaan protective antigen. In this case capsule formation begins after 2,5 hours of growth, and it may be well pronounced in 6-hour cultures. Cells encased in a capsule are detected in 24-hour cultures as well. However, in addition to encapsulated cells, revealed in both the exponential and stable forming vaccine strain cultures (Figure 5). different genetic characteristics, and main polypeptide, are encountered in populations bacillus. bacteria devoid of capsules are also growth phases of virulent and capsule- This is evidence that mutants with Ly withAUt the capsule glutamic acid of different strains of anthrax In addition to native prot:i.n, an alkaline environment and presence of C02 promote capsule formation in culture (Sterne, 1937; Chu, 1952). _ The influence of carbon dioxide upon the activity of some bacterial mitochondrial enzymes was established owing to research by Eastin and Thorne (1963). This research shawed that the demand virulent and avirulent strains of anthrax bacillus exhibit _ for C02 during formation of capsule polypeptide differs: The former need it in . higher concentrations, while the latter can also synthesize capsule polypeptide in _ an atmosphere devoid of C02. 17 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300070003-8 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300074403-8 ~ v~~ va l iVLA1J UJli Vl\L,L . ~ ~