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STUDIES ON NATURAL IMMUNITY TO PNEUMOCOCCUS TYPE III : IV. OBSERVATIONS ON A NON-TYPE SPECIFIC HUMORAL FACTOR INVOLVED IN RESISTANCE TO PNEUMOCOCCUS TYPE III

Since there is no evidence for the occurrence of type specific antibody in the normal rabbit and since, as we have shown, the Pneumococcus Type III whether avirulent or virulent is not removed from the blood stream or destroyed when the capsule is intact, the following factors which have been reveal...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Enders, John F., Wu, Chao-Jen, Shaffer, Morris F.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1936
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2133433/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19870545
Descripción
Sumario:Since there is no evidence for the occurrence of type specific antibody in the normal rabbit and since, as we have shown, the Pneumococcus Type III whether avirulent or virulent is not removed from the blood stream or destroyed when the capsule is intact, the following factors which have been revealed in the course of our work appear to represent certain essential components, if not the complete mechanism, upon which the natural immunity of the rabbit against this organism depends. (a) The elevation of the body temperature after intravenous infection to 41°C. or thereabouts and its maintenance for varying periods. (b) The ability of the phagocytic cells, both fixed and mobile, to attack any cocci which have become vulnerable through the deterioration of capsular integrity. (c) The adjuvant effect of an antibody, reacting with the somatic C carbohydrate, which enhances the phagocytosis of such organisms as no longer possess a completely intact envelope. Conversely, the varying degrees of virulence for rabbits observed among Pneumococcus Type III strains are based upon: (a) differences in the ability of the organisms to multiply at the elevated temperatures encountered in the infected host. Strains markedly susceptible to the harmful influence of this factor fail to induce a generalized fatal infection. Not all "thermo-resistant" strains are highly virulent, however, and these may contrast sharply with regard to (b) size of the capsule and the ease with which it is impaired or completely lost. The capsules must be maintained intact for a sufficient time until multiplication of the organisms can proceed to such a degree that death of the host results. Avirulent strains even when capable of growth at 41°C. appear to be unable to satisfy this requirement. The differences in virulence of various strains apparently conditioned by these factors are not limited solely to the case of the rabbit, since for at least two strains similar differences in virulence have been shown to exist when the intravenous route of infection is employed in mice.