scholarly journals THE INTERACTION IN VITRO BETWEEN GROUP B MENINGOCOCCI AND RABBIT POLYMORPHONUCLEAR LEUKOCYTES

1967 ◽  
Vol 126 (5) ◽  
pp. 795-818 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard B. Roberts

The interaction in vitro between group B meningococci and rabbit polymorphonuclear leukocytes has been described. Phagocytosis did not occur in the presence of normal rabbit serum. Antiserum collected 12–21 days following one subcutaneous inoculation of living log phase meningococci exhibited opsonic activity with type specificity; this opsonic action depended on both heat-labile and heat-stable factors. Following ingestion by granulocytes, meningococci were rapidly killed. These studies suggest that group B meningococcal strains contain specific antiphagocytic surface factors of an as yet unknown chemical nature. Antisera obtained 4 or more wk after immunization showed bactericidal activity with the same type specificity as opsonic activity. This bactericidal activity was also lost after heating and restored by the addition of normal serum. Further studies on opsonins and bactericidins for meningococci may shed light on virulence factors in these microorganisms, and may prove useful for a more precise classification of meningococci according to type rather than group specificity.

1976 ◽  
Vol 143 (5) ◽  
pp. 1186-1198 ◽  
Author(s):  
B F Anthony

The opsonization and phagocytosis of group B streptococci of types Ia, Ib, and Ic were studied in vitro by measuring the uptake of radioactivity by coverslip cultures of rabbit alevolar macrophages during incubation with radiolabeled, nonviable bacteria which had been exposed to rabbit serum. The uptake of counts per minute was quantitative, reproducible, and reversibly inhibited by cold, indicating that it was largely a measurement of phagocytic ingestion rather than of attachment of bacteria-immunoglobulin complexes to macrophage membranes. Moreover, suspended macrophages killed approximately 90% of viable streptococci in the presence of specific antiserum. The opsonic activity of immune serum was heat stable, and phagocytosis of streptococci was insignificant after incubation with normal serum and antiserum to some heterologous group B streptococci. By absorption studies, it was possible to identify the effect of antibodies to specific bacterial antigens. Phagocytosis of streptococci containing the corresponding antigens was maximal after opsonization with homologous or heterologous sera containing antibody to IaCHO, IbCHO, or Ibc protein. Phagocytosis of all three serotypes was intermediate when opsonization could be attributed to anti-IabcCHO. The opsonization of a specific group B streptococcus is complex and may involve two or more antigen-antibody systems.


1993 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. T. Fisher ◽  
J. W. Anderson ◽  
M. A. Waldron

We tested the hypothesis that vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) or nitric oxide (NO) is the nonadrenergic noncholinergic (NANC) neurotransmitter in feline trachealis. Isometric tension was measured in trachealis (open or closed tracheal rings) in vitro. Propranolol (10 microM) and atropine (1 microM) were present throughout the experiment, and smooth muscle tone was increased to 60–90% maximal with 5-hydroxytryptamine. We used three methodologies to reduce the relaxation function of VIP, which in turn should reduce NANC-mediated relaxation. 1) The putative VIP antagonist peptide T (10 microM) did not affect VIP concentration-response curves or electrical field stimulation- (EFS) induced NANC responses. 2) Incubation of tissue in specific VIP antiserum (16 h at 4 degrees C) did not reduce EFS-induced NANC relaxations relative to tissue incubated in normal rabbit serum (P > 0.05). On the basis of our passive immunization techniques, it is not possible to absolutely reject VIP as the NANC transmitter. We speculate that nonspecific peptidases present in normal serum and VIP antiserum reduce EFS-induced responses similarly. 3) VIP desensitization, confirmed by a significant rightward shift (P < 0.01) in the VIP concentration-response curve, was achieved by exposing tissues (n = 11) to 1.0 microM VIP for 30 min. Desensitization did not reduce the EFS-induced NANC relaxatory response (P < 0.05) compared with control tissues, suggesting that VIP is not the NANC mediator.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


1962 ◽  
Vol 115 (3) ◽  
pp. 453-466 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen Boyden

An in vitro technique is described for assessing the chemotactic activity of soluble substances on motile cells. Antibody-antigen mixtures when incubated (37°C) in medium containing fresh (i.e. non-inactivated) normal rabbit serum exert a strong chemotactic effect on rabbit polymorphonuclear leucocytes. Results are described which indicate that, when antibody-antigen complexes are incubated (37°C) in fresh serum, a heat-stable (56°C) substance (or substances) is produced which acts directly as a chemotactic stimulus on the polymorphs. This heat-stable chemotactic substance is not produced when antibody-antigen complexes are incubated in serum which has been heated at 56°C for 30 minutes.


1920 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 381-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hideyo Noguchi

In several series of experiments guinea pigs were variously infected with different amounts of Leptospira icteroides, either in the form of culture, organ emulsion from infected guinea pigs, or a mixture of both. The infecting materials were of different grades of virulence; in some series the amount given was near a single lethal dose, in others a subminimum lethal dose was given, i.e. causing mild infection with recovery in the majority of animals, and in still others the animals were injected with at least 50 minimum lethal doses of a mixture of a culture and a highly virulent organ emulsion from a guinea pig. The animals were inoculated intraperitoneally, and within about 30 minutes each was injected subcutaneously with a different amount of salvarsan or neosalvarsan. The amounts injected were in most series 0.0005, 0.001, 0.002, 0.005, 0.01, 0.02, and 0.03 gm. per 350 to 450 gm. of body weight, and in one series, in addition to this dosage, 0.00005,0.0001, and 0.0002 gm. were also tried. Among the guinea pigs treated either with salvarsan or with neosalvarsan there were more recoveries than among the controls, but they were not in strict proportion to the amounts of the drugs injected. In the experiments with 50 minimum lethal doses of the infecting material there were several recoveries among those which received 0.001 to 0.002 to 0.003 gm., but all passed through a typical infection with all its symptoms. It is extremely doubtful, therefore, whether salvarsan or neosalvarsan mitigated the severity of the infection. The fact is noteworthy that in the same series of experiments the guinea pigs receiving 0.00005 and 0.0001 gm., or thereabout, of salvarsan died 1 to 2 days sooner than the controls, which died in 6 to 7 days. This suggests a possible earlier injury of the kidneys by the drugs, giving the leptospiras an easier and earlier access to, and localization in this organ. The inefficacy or dubious therapeutic value of salvarsan and neosalvarsan against the experimental icteroides infection of guinea pigs presents a close analogy to the observations already made by several investigators with Leptospira icterohæmorrhagiæ. Several series of test-tube experiments were also made to determine the direct effect of salvarsan and neosalvarsan on Leptospira icteroides cultures. It was found, the injurious effect of alkalinity being eliminated, that the leptospiras remain motile for at least I hour in a concentration weaker than 1:10,000 of salvarsan or 1:1,000 of neosalvarsan. But they become gradually sluggish and succumb to the effect of the drugs at the end of 18 to 24 hours. The highest dilution which killed the leptospira in 18 hours was somewhere near 1:200,000. When added to a culture medium, salvarsan and neosalvarsan both suppressed the growth of icteroides when their concentration in the medium was 1:200,000. Hence these two drugs are highly poisonous for Leptospira icteroides. The serums derived from rabbits which received 0.05 gm. of salvarsan or neosalvarsan per kilo of body weight 1 hour before bleeding proved to be very different from a normal rabbit serum in their behavior toward Leptospira icteroides. In the salvarsanized or neosalvarsanized serums the leptospiras remained active for at least 1 hour but appeared somewhat sluggish at the end of 18 hours, and were all dead and degenerated when examined after 48 hours. On the other hand, the leptospiras mixed with normal rabbit serum lived well and multiplied during the same period of time and under otherwise identical conditions (at 28°C.) To these tubes another portion of culture was added to determine whether or not a rapidly detrimental toxic substance had appeared in the drugged serum while standing for 72 hours, but the organisms remained still active at the end of 1 hour, 24 hours being required to kill them. In another experiment the salvarsanized and neosalvarsanized serums, together with normal serum as a control, were first left standing for 72 hours, after which period a rich culture of icteroides was introduced. The organisms remained uninfluenced for 1 hour in all the serums, but at the end of 24 hours many of those in the drugged serums were dead, and none was left alive at the end of 48 hours. In normal serum they steadily increased in numbers and were all active. It is evident, then, that salvarsan or neosalvarsan introduced intravenously into the body of the rabbit is present in some form in the blood serum drawn at the end of 1 hour. The substance present in such serum has a slowly operating injurious effect upon Leptospira icteroides. The action of the drugs seems to be slower after passage through the animal body than before. If this phenomenon were to take place also in the infected body injected with these drugs, it is obvious that in a rapidly evolving infectious disease like yellow fever the progress of the infection will be too rapid to allow the drugs to exert their beneficial effect upon the course of the disease. In direct contrast to the behavior of salvarsan and neosalvarsan in vivo and in vitro, anti-icteroides immune horse serum in a dose of 0.0001 cc., or 1 cc. of a 1:10,000 dilution, protected guinea pigs from an infection with at least 5,000 minimum lethal doses of icteroides when injected simultaneously, but the same serum failed to exert any injurious effect upon the organism when mixed in vitro in a concentration weaker than 1:2,000. A rapid disintegration resulted with a concentration of 1:20 and almost complete agglutination and degeneration in 1:200. The contrast between chemotherapy, as carried out with salvarsan and neosalvarsan, and serotherapy demonstrated with an immune serum is apparently of considerable practical significance.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 86 (6) ◽  
pp. 955-962
Author(s):  
Laurence B. Givner

Currently available human immunoglobulin preparations for intravenous use (IVIGs) are being used (with antibiotics) by some physicians for therapy of sepsis in newborns. Most neonatal sepsis and/or meningitis in this country is caused by group B Streptococcus (GBS), and most of these cases are due to type III GBS (III-GBS). The killing of III-GBS in vitro is dependent on specific IgG antibody. Adequate serum levels of specific III-GBS antibody protect the exposed newborn from the development of invasive disease. Therefore, III-GBS was used as a model to evaluate the activity of three IVIG preparations available for clinical use. Specific antibody levels, in vitro opsonophagocytic killing, and protective efficacy in animal models revealed differences in activity for III-GBS between the three IVIG preparations as well as between IVIG lots from the same manufacturer. Furthermore, it was found that the effect of IVIG using one of the assay methods may not reliably predict activity obtained using the other assays. These data document the inability to predict functional activity against a specific pathogen such as GBS on the part of a lot of IVIG chosen at random. In view of these findings and of the limited data evaluating clinical efficacy, IVIG cannot be recommended at this time for use in the therapy of infectious diseases such as neonatal sepsis.


1993 ◽  
Vol 136 (2) ◽  
pp. 345-353 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Waddell ◽  
P. J. Burton

ABSTRACT This study assessed whether bioactive ACTH is released by the human placenta during perifusion in vitro at early and late gestation. Human placental villous fragments from early (8–12 weeks) and late (38–40 weeks) gestation were perifused at a constant rate for 6·5 h. To assess ACTH-like bioactivity released by this tissue, the perifusion effluent was redirected through adjacent chambers containing freshly dispersed adrenocortical cells obtained from adult rats. Baseline secretion of corticosterone by these adrenocortical cells averaged 95±26 (s.e.m.) fmol/min, and this increased at least fivefold (P <0·01, two-way ANOVA) in response to placental effluent at early and late gestation. The magnitude of this increase, expressed as a percentage of the maximal response to a subsequent stimulus with ACTH(1–24), was similar for placentas obtained at early (41 ± 12% of maximal response) and late (42 ± 17%) gestation. Immunoreactive (I)-ACTH was readily detectable in placental effluent from all preparations (5·5±2·3 fmol/min per g tissue), and there was no apparent difference with stage of gestation. To determine whether all of the ACTH-like bioactivity released by the placenta was attributable to I-ACTH, a second series of placental/adrenal perifusions was conducted. In these, I-ACTH was selectively removed from placental effluent by immunoneutralization, and the residual bioactivity measured. Immunoneutralization involved preincubation of placental effluent with ACTH antiserum (1:100), and preincubation with normal rabbit serum (NRS) served as a control. Preincubation with ACTH antiserum, but not with NRS, resulted in a marked reduction in ACTH-like bioactivity present in placental effluent at both early (P <0·01, paired t-test) and late (P <0·05) gestation. This inhibition was significantly more effective (P <0·05, unpaired t-test) at early than at late gestation. Overall, these data establish that the human placenta can release bioactive ACTH-like activity at both early and late gestation, and that much, but not all, of this bioactivity is directly attributable to I-ACTH. These findings clearly demonstrate a potential role for placental ACTH in directly influencing the maternal and/or fetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axes during human pregnancy. Journal of Endocrinology (1993) 136, 345–353


1965 ◽  
Vol 121 (4) ◽  
pp. 551-560 ◽  
Author(s):  
Honor B. Fell ◽  
L. Weiss

1. The effects of normal rabbit serum and of rabbit antiserum to whole foetal mouse tissues, on the isolated limb bones of late foetal mice were studied in organ culture, and the influence of hydrocortisone on these effects was investigated. 2. Unheated normal serum caused slight loss of metachromatic material from the cartilage matrix, and some resorption of both cartilage and bone. 3. In unheated antiserum to foetal mouse tissues, the terminal cartilage was smaller and less metachromatic than in paired controls in normal serum, while osteoclasis was so intense that in many explants the bone had almost disappeared. The amount of necrosis varied with different batches of antiserum. 4. The changes produced by normal serum and antiserum could be largely prevented by heating the sera to 57°C for 45 minutes. 5. The effects could also be inhibited by the addition of hydrocortisone to the unheated sera; as little as 0.1 µg hydrocortisone per ml of medium had a well marked protective action. 6. It is suggested that (a) unheated antiserum causes a release of lysosomal enzymes with consequent breakdown of intercellular material, (b) this release is due to an indirect action on the lysosome via an increased permeability of the cell membrane, (c) hydrocortisone does not affect the antigen-antibody reaction, but inhibits the autolytic changes that normally follow this reaction, possibly by stabilising both the lysosomal and cell membranes.


1971 ◽  
Vol 134 (2) ◽  
pp. 351-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin H. Beachey ◽  
Gene H. Stollerman

Purified M protein isolated from Group A streptococci produced cytotoxic reactions in normal human blood in vitro. In the presence of M antigen, platelets aggregated, fused, and lysed. Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) surrounded the platelet aggregates, then became highly vacuolated and lysed. In addition, PMN progressively lost their capacity to phagocytose unrelated bacteria and to migrate in glass capillary pipettes. Platelet-PMN reactions were directly proportional to the type-specific precipitin reactivity of each M preparation and could be removed with homologous M antibody, only. Moreover, the reactivity of M protein was abolished by enzymatic digestion with trypsin, but not with lysozyme, strongly suggesting that cell-wall mucopeptide was not involved. Preliminary studies showed that platelet-PMN reactions require heat-stable and heat-labile serum factors, presumably antibody and complement. It is suggested that cytotoxic determinants are uncovered by the extraction and purification process and are intimately associated with the type-specific M determinant, possibly in a molecular complex.


Parasitology ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 269-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Rickard ◽  
J. C. Katiyar

SummaryLarvae of Taenia pisiformis were cultured in vitro in medium containing 2·5, 5 or 20% (v/v) of normal rabbit serum (NRS). Greatest development occurred in 20% NRS, and the potency of antigens collected in medium from each culture tested by intradermal (i/d) skin tests in infected rabbits paralleled the in vitro growth rate of larvae. ‘Culture’ antigens from 5% NRS stimulated good immunity in rabbits to a challenge infection with T. pisiformis eggs, although they were poorly reactive in skin tests.T. pisiformis larvae were also cultured in 10% (v/v) of nitrates of serum reduced to one-half of its volume by passage through 300 000 MW cut oif (XM300F) or 100000 MW cut off (XM100F) ultrafiltration membranes. Larvae cultured using XM300F had growth rates comparable with those cultured in 20% NRS, and the antigens released into the culture medium had equal potency in i/d tests and in stimulating protective immunity in rabbits. Larvae did not develop in XM100F orproduce skin-reactive or protective antigens.Crude ‘culture’ antigen from cultures in 20% NRS was separated into 4 fractions by nitration on Sephadex G200. All of these fractions gave i/d skin reactions in infected rabbits. Fraction 3 (F3) was the most active, but was shown by acrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoelectrophoresis to be highly contaminated with rabbit serum proteins. F3 was separated into fractions on DEAE-Sephadex A50, and the third fraction from this was as active as the original culture medium in i/d skin tests, but had only 5% of the original protein concentration. Electrophoresis demonstrated few serum contaminants, and 2 indistinct protein bands that were not present in a similar fraction of NRS.Neither Sephadex G200 F3 nor DEAE-Sephadex F3 stimulated protective immunity in rabbits, suggesting that antigens stimulating immunity against the establishment of T. pisiformis in rabbits and those provoking cell-mediated immune reactions may be different.


1958 ◽  
Vol 108 (6) ◽  
pp. 925-944 ◽  
Author(s):  
James G. Hirsch

The arginine-rich fraction of calf thymus histone (histone B) exerts bactericidal activity on various coliform bacilli and micrococci under certain conditions in vitro. Final concentrations of less than 1 µg. histone per ml. kill susceptible microbes without detectable morphological alteration or lysis. Among the microorganisms highly susceptible to histone are Escherichia, Salmonella, Shigella, Pseudomonas, Klebsiella, and Micrococcus pyogenes var. albus. Less susceptible or completely resistant are Proteus, Serratia, Micrococcus pyogenes var. aureus, and various types of hemolytic streptococci. Coliforms grown on solid media are much more resistant to the lethal effect of histone than are those cultured in liquid media. This difference is apparently related to the physiological state of the bacteria; agar grown microorganisms washed with water remain resistant to histone, whereas incubation in broth rapidly renders them more susceptible. Histone is adsorbed onto heat-killed E. coli K-12 under conditions suitable for lethal action on this organism. The bactericidal activity of histone is but little affected by pH of the test system, but ionic strength of the medium exerts a marked influence, the lethal action being reduced or blocked as the salt concentration reaches levels higher than that of 0.15–0.2 M NaCl. Relatively high concentrations of rabbit serum or of bovine plasma albumin reduce the bactericidal activity of histone in a medium at pH 7; these serum preparations are, however, essentially without effect in the test system at pH 5.6. The bactericidal effect of histone is antagonized by addition to the medium of small amounts of certain basic substances (protamine, spermine), or of various acid polysaccharides (heparin, nucleic acid, bacterial lipopolysaccharides). The rate of killing of E. coli K-12 by histone increases as the temperature and the concentration of histone are raised. Within the limits studied, this rate also appears to be directly proportional to the concentration of bacteria in the system.


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