Japanese Journal of Microbiology
Print ISSN : 0021-5139
Volume 19, Issue 4
Displaying 1-12 of 12 articles from this issue
  • Yasuo KOIKE, Akira KUWAHARA, Hiroshi FUJIWARA
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 241-247
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The morphological, physiological, and biochemical characteristics of twelve "Pasteurella" piscicida strains isolated from white perch and yellowtail are described and the present uncertain taxonomic status of the organisms is discussed. The organisms isolated were gram-negative rods showing bipolar staining and pleomorphism. No spores or flagella were observed. They were non motile and viscid colonies were formed. Growth was observed in a temperature range of 20 to 30 C and the salinity range of growth was between 0.5% and 4.0%. They were aerobic and facultative anaerobic. Oxidase and catalase were produced. Nitrates were not reduced to nitrites. Lysine and ornithine decarboxylases were not produced but arginine dihydrolase was produced. The egg yolk reaction was positive. Tween 80 and tributyrin were decomposed. Phosphatase was produced. Beta hemolysis was revealed on a medium containing defibrinated blood from chickens or carp but not from mammals. Methyl red and Voges-Proskauer tests were positive, and acetoin was produced from 2, 3-butanediol. Glucose was fermented without gas production. Acid was produced from fructose, mannose, galactose, sucrose, maltose, dextrin and glycerol. These organisms differed from all other members of the genus Pasteurella with respect to nitrate reduction, arginine dihydrolase, Voges-Proskauer and methyl red tests. The formation of viscid colonies and inability to grow in a medium without sodium chloride or at 37 C were additional characteristics of these organisms.
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  • Bacterial Interaction and Effect of Antibiotics
    Noriyoshi HARA
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 249-254
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Germ-free ICR mice were mono- or dicontaminated with a multi-drug-resistant strain BIO-4R of Streptococcus faecalis (BIO-4R) and Escherichia coli 026: K60 (E. coli) and administered aminobenzyl penicillin (ABPC). BIO-4R was established in the intestinal tract at a level of 108 viable cells per gram of stool on the fourth day following oral inoculation and the BIO-4R population was stably maintained thereafter. The drug resistance of BIO-4R remained unchanged in the intestinal tract of gnotobiotes throughout the experiment. Highly resistant cells of E. coli were isolated from the feces of some dicontaminated mice after ABPC administration. However, it seems that the high resistance of these E. coli is not due to the transfer of resistance of BIO-4R to E. coli. All animals given a large amount of BIO-4R (108 cells) per os survived throughout the study period of two weeks without symptoms.
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  • III. Adjuvant Effect of Cell Wall of Mycobacterium bovis BCGon Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity in Mice
    Tadayoshi TANIYAMA, Ichiro AZUMA, Yuichi YAMAMURA
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 255-264
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A quantitative assay and characterization of oil-attached cell wall of Mycobacterium bovis BCG (BCG-CWS) which stimulates cell-mediated immunity of spleen cells to alloantigens in mice were carried out by an in vitro cell-mediated cytotoxicity test using 51Cr-labeled target cells. C57BL/6J mice (H-2b) were immunized intraperitoneally with mastocytoma cells (H-2d) with or without oil-attached BCG-CWS. The cytotoxicity, comparable to that of spleen cells from mice immunized with mastocytoma cells (3×107), could be induced in spleens of mice immunized with a mixture of mastocytoma cells (104) and oil-attached BCG-CWS. The enhancing effect persisted for 55 days or more after the alloantigenic immunization. Oil-attached BCG-CWS enhanced cell-mediated cytotoxicity of T cells in the spleen and the mesenteric lymph node, but not in the thymus. The cytotoxicity showed specificity toward the alloantigen used for immunization. In addition to BCG-CWS, the cell walls of Nocardia rubra and Corynebacterium diphtheriae PW8 and the peptidoglycolipids of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Aoyama B were found to be potent stimulants of cell-mediated cytotoxicity in mice. Oil-attached BCG-CWS did not enhance humoral response to mastocytoma cells but enhanced cell-mediated cytotoxicity when viable mastocytoma cells were used as antigen. The above result was supported by the fact that anti-hapten antibody response induced by viable trinitrophenyl (TNP)-mastocytoma cells (104) plus oil-attached BCG-CWS did not increase to the maximum level as was observed in mice immunized with a larger number of mastocytoma cells (3×107) alone, while cell-mediated cytotoxicity induced by the same treatment increased to the maximum level obtained by immunization with mastocytoma cells (3×107) alone.
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  • Ichiro AZUMA, Kazuhisa SUGIMURA, Tadayoshi TANIYAMA, Aminkham A. ALADI ...
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 265-275
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The chemical and immunological properties of the cell walls prepared from the cells of anaerobic coryneforms, Propionibaeterium acnes C7 and Corynebacterium parvum ATCC 11829, were partially investigated. The cell walls prepared from P. acnes C7 and C. parvum ATCC 11829 were composed of fatty acids. polysaccharides consisting glucose, galactose and mannose and mucopeptides consisting mainly of alanine, glutamic acid, α, ε-diaminopimelic acid, glycine, muramic acid and glucosamine. As the fatty acid constituents of the cell wall of P. acnes C7, iso-pentadecanoic acid and iso-heptadecanoic acid were detected as major components. Both cell walls prepared from P. acnes C7 and C. parvum ATCC 11829 showed potent adjuvant activity on the formation of circulating antibody and development of delayed type hypersensitivity in vivo and on the primary immune response to sheep erythrocytes in vitro, however, could not augment helper function of carrier-primed T cells and on the development of cellmediated cytotoxicity to mastocytoma P815-X2 cells in C57BL/6J mice. It is also shown that the cell walls of P. acnes C7 and C. parvum ATCC 11829 act on mouse spleen cells as mitogen.
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  • IV. The Roles of Antigen and Adjuvant for Induction of Primary and Secondary Antibody Responses and for Development of Immunological Memory to Bovine Serum Albumin
    Izumi NAKASHIMA, Nobuo KATO
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 277-285
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A study was performed to clarify the roles of primary and secondary injections of antigen and adjuvant (capsular polysaccharide of Klebsiella pneumoniae, CPS-K) in induction of antibody responses and in development of immunological memory in mice to bovine serum albumin (BSA). A primary injecion of BSA alone neither induced significant primary antibody response nor increased immunological memory for a secondary antibody response but, if primary injections of BSA and CPS-K were performed simultaneously, high antibody responses were induced. Moreover, a prior injection of BSA alone or CPS-K alone decreased the level of primary antibody response and the degree of increase in memory following the subsequent injection of BSA mixed with CPS-K. In contrast, a secondary in-jection of BSA alone into mice once primed with a mixture of BSA and CPS-K elicited very high secondary type antibody response and increased secondarily the memory for a tertiary antibody response. Injection of CPS-K simultaneously with or shortly before or after the secondary injection of BSA did not increase the level of the secondary antibody response and the degree of the secondary increase in memory. Augmentation of the secondary antibody response was elicited by simultaneous injection of CPS-K only when the secondary response was induced inadequately by a suboptimum or supraoptimum dose of antigen.
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  • Takushi TADAKUMA, Takashi MITSUMA, Hiromichi ISHIKAWA, Kazuhisa SAITO
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 287-298
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Restoration of the impaired antibody response to sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) in cultures of mouse spleen cells, which were deprived of thymus-derived lymphocytes (T cells) by treatment with antimouse brain-associated θ (BAθ) antiserum and complement, was studied by adding a small portion of syngeneic or allogeneic normal spleen cells in vitro. Allogeneic spleen cells had a far greater effect than syngeneic spleen cells on the restoration, as far as the normal spleen cells added were able to recognize the alloantigens on the anti-BAθ serum-treated spleen cells (bone marrow-derived lymphocytes). Treatment of the allogeneic spleen cells with mitomycin C did not affect their activity in the restoration of the impaired antibody response. The possibility that the role of T cells in the antibody response to SRBC may be replaced by a nonspecific mediator derived from T cells reacting with allogeneic cells was proven by the finding that supernatant of the mixed allogeneic spleen cell cultures restored the impaired anti-SRBC antibody response of the T cell-depleted spleen cells. The effect of such culture supernatant on the restoration of the antibody response was greatest when it was added to the T cell-depleted spleen cell cultures one day after cultivation with SRBC, suggesting that the effectiveness may result from triggering of the proliferation and differentiation of antibody-forming cell precursors, which have already reacted with the antigen, to antibody-forming cells.
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  • Masao J. TANABE, Kazuhisa SAITO
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 299-307
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    An attempt was made to determine if there is any common mechanism in the enhanced antibody response caused either by injection of adjuvant, such as bacterial endotoxin (LPS) and complexed polynucleotides, or by secondary antigenic stimulation. LPS inoculated in mice 4 days before injection of sheep red blood cells (SRBC) and polyA:U invalidated the adjuvant effect of polyA:U injected together with SRBC. and the hemolysin plaque-forming cell (PFC) response of such mice was similar to that of the mice which received SRBC alone. When mice primed with SRBC 24 days in advance were injected with LPS and 4 days later re-stimulated with SRBC, their PFC response to the secondary stimulation was suppressed to less than one tenth of the normal secondary PFC response. The suppressive effect of 0LPS on the secondary antibody response was abolished if the serum collected from mice injected with LPS was given to the primed and LPS-injected mice at the time of the secondary antigenic stimulation. From these results we discussed the possibility that some common mediator might play a role in the enhanced antibody response elicited by either adjuvant injection or secondary injection of antigen.
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  • Saburo MIYAMOTO, Koichi KURODA
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 309-317
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Halophilic Bdellovibrio, which is parasitic and lytic to Vibrio parahaemolyticus, was isolated from fresh sea water in the winter. It had a lethal effect on V. parahaemolyticus. The optimum temperature for multiplication ranged from 25 C to 30 C and growth was not observed at 35 C. Plaque numbers of the isolate reached a maximum in 17 hr under conditions of shaking at 25 C in autoclaved sea water supplemented with V. parahaemolyticus cells, and were as high as ten times the number of host cells. With respect to the host-suspended medium, the isolate multiplied in natural sea water ten times more than in Herbst's artificial sea water but did not grow in saline. V. parahaemolyticus, Vibrio alginolyticus and several species in the Vibrio genus were susceptible to the parasite on the basis of plaque formation but Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus were not.
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  • II. Pathogenicity of Mycobacterium lepraemurium Maintained in Mouse Foot Pad Cell Culture and Interaction of the Bacilli with the Infected Cells
    Yoshiyasu MATSUO
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 319-325
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A serially diluted bacterial suspension of the Kurume-42 strain of Mycobacterium lepraemurium maintained for 1255 days in a mouse foot pad (MFP) cell culture was inoculated in mice subcutaneously. The ID50 value was estimated at more than 10.7 and less than 85 organisms, indicating that pathogenicity of the organism had been maintained well in a long-term cell culture. The cells infected and maintained for a long period in the cell culture showed all the stages of cell mitosis. This suggests that the bacterial increase in cell cultures of M. lepraemurium is not only due to rephagocytosis of the bacilli released from the infected cells but also to a constant intracellular growth cycle of the bacilli accompanied by mitosis of the infected cells. In acid phosphatase activity, no appreciable differences were noted between the infected and uninfected cells as far as the present cell culture system was concerned. Most of the bacilli within the cells were ultrastructurally normal. Solid bacilli in phagosomes were surrounded by less electron-dense clear zones.
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  • Takashi AOKI, Syuzo EGUSA, Toshihiko ARAI
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 327-329
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Michio TSUKAMURA
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 331-332
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Ichiro AZUMA, Yuichi YAMAMURA, Tatsuo MORI
    1975 Volume 19 Issue 4 Pages 333-336
    Published: 1975
    Released on J-STAGE: April 18, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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