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Further Studies of Some “Nontypable” Group A Streptococci

Thirty-two strains of group A hemolytic streptococci which could not be M typed with the available typing sera in Nashville, Tenn., were reinvestigated at the Streptococcus Reference Laboratory in Colindale, England, in order to estimate the efficacy of other antisera not available in Nashville and...

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Autores principales: Quinn, Robert W., Maxted, W. R., Lowry, P. N.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1976
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2595282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/782048
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author Quinn, Robert W.
Maxted, W. R.
Lowry, P. N.
author_facet Quinn, Robert W.
Maxted, W. R.
Lowry, P. N.
author_sort Quinn, Robert W.
collection PubMed
description Thirty-two strains of group A hemolytic streptococci which could not be M typed with the available typing sera in Nashville, Tenn., were reinvestigated at the Streptococcus Reference Laboratory in Colindale, England, in order to estimate the efficacy of other antisera not available in Nashville and newer techniques (the opacity factor inhibition test) of typing strains not isolated in England. Fifty percent were eventually typed and all but four contained enough M protein to suggest that they would have been typed had the appropriate typing sera been available. The results indicate that group A streptococci truly lacking M protein were seldom isolated from the Nashville children from whom the streptococci were cultured. Several factors responsible for nontypability were considered, including the nonavailability of the necessary type-specific antisera and loss of M protein due to a change from Matt to glossy colonial types in the laboratory.
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spelling pubmed-25952822008-12-05 Further Studies of Some “Nontypable” Group A Streptococci Quinn, Robert W. Maxted, W. R. Lowry, P. N. Yale J Biol Med Original Contributions Thirty-two strains of group A hemolytic streptococci which could not be M typed with the available typing sera in Nashville, Tenn., were reinvestigated at the Streptococcus Reference Laboratory in Colindale, England, in order to estimate the efficacy of other antisera not available in Nashville and newer techniques (the opacity factor inhibition test) of typing strains not isolated in England. Fifty percent were eventually typed and all but four contained enough M protein to suggest that they would have been typed had the appropriate typing sera been available. The results indicate that group A streptococci truly lacking M protein were seldom isolated from the Nashville children from whom the streptococci were cultured. Several factors responsible for nontypability were considered, including the nonavailability of the necessary type-specific antisera and loss of M protein due to a change from Matt to glossy colonial types in the laboratory. 1976-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2595282/ /pubmed/782048 Text en
spellingShingle Original Contributions
Quinn, Robert W.
Maxted, W. R.
Lowry, P. N.
Further Studies of Some “Nontypable” Group A Streptococci
title Further Studies of Some “Nontypable” Group A Streptococci
title_full Further Studies of Some “Nontypable” Group A Streptococci
title_fullStr Further Studies of Some “Nontypable” Group A Streptococci
title_full_unstemmed Further Studies of Some “Nontypable” Group A Streptococci
title_short Further Studies of Some “Nontypable” Group A Streptococci
title_sort further studies of some “nontypable” group a streptococci
topic Original Contributions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2595282/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/782048
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