Affiliation:
1. Departments of Microbiology and Pediatrics, State University of New York at Buffalo, the Laboratory of Bacteriology of Children's Hospital, Buffalo, New York
2. Max-Planck Institut für Immunbiologie, Freiburg, Germany
Abstract
Enterobacteriaceae
share a common antigen (CA). This antigen exists as a powerful immunogen, when produced by
Escherichia coli
O14, and as a minimally effective immunogen, when present in cultures of most other smooth strains. The present study was directed toward the assessment of immunogenicity of this antigen produced by various rough mutants and their parent strains as well as that of viable and nonviable bacterial suspensions. Rabbits were immunized intravenously, and the passive hemagglutination test was used for the quantitation of CA antibodies. The following results were obtained. (i) Immunization of rabbits with viable or heat-killed (1 hr, 100 C) suspensions of smooth parent strains resulted in only slight or insignificant antibody production. Of seven additional smooth strains of
Enterobacteriaceae
tested, none induced CA antibodies upon immunization with killed (1 hr, 100 C) suspensions, and only two engendered antibodies in moderate titers when viable suspensions were used, possibly due to the presence of undetected R mutant cells. (ii) In contrast, administration of viable suspensions of the corresponding mutant strains, regardless of core types, including
E. coli
R1, R2, R3, and
Salmonella
Ra types, caused a significant antibody response. (iii) The immunogenicity of R mutants differed strikingly, inasmuch as mutants with the R1 core [
E. coli
O8
−
:K27
−
(R) and
Shigella boydii
type 3
−
(R)] engendered CA antibodies when heated suspensions were administered, in contrast to heated suspensions of mutants with the R2, R3, and Ra cores. (iv) Viability per se is not an abolute requirement for immunogenicity of R2 mutants, since CA antibodies were engendered by suspensions killed at 60 C or by merthiolate or formaldehyde. (v) Ethanol fractionation revealed that immunogenic CA of the R1 mutant is ethanol-insoluble and that of the parental smooth strain is ethanol-soluble; thus, CA of R1 mutants resembles that of
E. coli
O14 in both immunogenicity and ethanol insolubility.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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