The role of the neuraminidase produced by Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae (E. rhusiopathiae) in the pathogenesis of arteritis and induced thrombocytopenia was examined using young and adult rats. There was a close correlation between bacterial invasion, desialation and cell infiltration in the common iliac artery. E. rhusiopathiae induced arteritis from the second and third day after inoculation with 3 X 10(8) viable bacteria in the young and adult rats, respectively. This delay with age was closely related to the increase of free sialic acid in the plasma. The sites invaded by E. rhusiopathiae coincided with the desialated lesions, and the bacteria invaded the periarterial region which was always accompanied by desialation when examined with FITC-conjugated peanut lectin. The free sialic acid in the plasma was, at least partly, considered to originate from the desialation of the arterial wall caused by E. rhusiopathiae. The platelet number decreased significantly after inoculation. The sialic acid content of the platelets prepared from circulating blood at 12 and 18 hours after inoculation showed a slight decrease and decreased further when the platelets were incubated with the bacteria. Platelets obtained from circulating blood within 24 hours after inoculation or incubated with the bacteria had demonstrated desialated sites as detected by immunofluorescent staining with FITC-conjugated peanut lectin. In conclusion, free sialic acid in the plasma was considered to be a good marker of the desialation of the arteries caused by E. rhusiopathiae, and the neuraminidase produced by the bacteria would be a key to solve the pathogenesis of the arteritis and thrombocytopenia.