ANALYSIS OF SEQUENTIAL STAGES IN SERUM BACTERICIDAL REACTIONS

Author:

Michael J. Gabriel1,Braun Werner2

Affiliation:

1. House of the Good Samaritan, Children's Hospital Medical Center, and Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

2. Institute of Microbiology, Rutgers, The State University, New Brunswick, New Jersey

Abstract

Michael, J. Gabriel (House of the Good Samaritan, Children's Hospital Medical Center, Boston, Mass.), and Werner Braun . Analysis of sequential stages in serum bactericidal reaction. J. Bacteriol. 87: 1067–1072. 1964.—The bactericidal reaction of “normal” human serum against Escherichia coli was found to be separable into two distinctive stages. The early (first) stage of the reaction lasts for a relatively short period of time, and involves factors that are present in sufficient amounts only in slightly diluted serum. The later (second) stage needs more time and requires factors present in highly diluted serum. The first stage depends on the presence of Ca ++ and Mg ++ and on the activity of all components of complement; the second stage does not require divalent cations and C′1, C′2, and C′4, but requires factors that can be removed by zymosan. Under our conditions, removal of lysozyme did not influence either stage of the reaction. Bacteria exposed to concentrated serum for a short time, during the first stage, are essentially unaffected as far as their potential for subsequent multiplication is concerned; the actual damage to cellular integrity occurs only during the second stage of the reaction. In the absence of cell division, the “sensitization” produced during the first stage can be preserved for prolonged periods, and the bactericidal reaction can be completed later by exposure to antibody-free, highly diluted serum (second stage). Cell multiplication abolishes the sensitizing effects of the first stage.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

Reference10 articles.

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2. Quantitative studies on immune bacteriolysis. II. The role of Iysozyme in immune bacteriolysis;INOUE K., Y.;Biken's J.,1959

3. MAYER M. M. 1961. Complement and complement fixation p. 159-187. In E. A. Kabat and M. M. MIayer [ed.] Experimental immunochemistry. Charles C Thomas Publisher Springfield 111.

4. MIYAMA A. 0. J. PLESCIA W. BRAUN AND B. BJORKLUND. 1962. Comparison of bactericidal and hemolytic serum systems. Bacteriol. Proc. p. 86.

5. MICHAEL J. G. 1959. Studies on the action and modification of bactericidal serum system. Ph.D. Thesis Rutgers University New Brunswick N.J.

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