MICROBIOLOGY and IMMUNOLOGY
Online ISSN : 1348-0421
Print ISSN : 0385-5600
ISSN-L : 0385-5600
Volume 21, Issue 12
Displaying 1-7 of 7 articles from this issue
  • Sumio YAMADA, Hideo IGARASHI, Takeshi TERAYAMA
    1977 Volume 21 Issue 12 Pages 675-682
    Published: December 20, 1977
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Detection and identification of staphylococcal enterotoxins in food or culture filtrates were performed using the reversed passive hemagglutination (RPHA) technique, with formalized sheep red blood cells (FSRBC) sensitized with immunoglobulins of anti-A, B, C, D, and E rabbit hyperimmune sera fractionated by affinity chromatography. The FSRBC sensitized with anti-AE immunoglobulins showed a high level of reactivity and specificity in RPHA, against homologous types of purified enterotoxins and culture filtrates of toxin-producing strains. No non-specific reactions with various ingredients in foods nor cross-reactions among enterotoxin types were observed. The minimum amount of enterotoxins in foods detected by RPHA was calculated to be 0.01 μg/g without concentration, and the recovery rate of experimentally added toxins was calculated to be about 80%.
    Under routine laboratory practice, detection and identification of enterotoxins from incriminated foods of five food poisoning outbreaks were performed by RPHA within 3 hr after reception of the specimens. Among them, three were determined to be enterotoxin A food poisoning, one to be toxin C and the rest to be intoxication of A and D. The concentration of the toxins was between 0.014 and 3.65 μg per gram of food.
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  • Teruko TAMURA, Fumihiro TAGUCHI, Katsumoto UEDA, Kôsaku FUJIWARA
    1977 Volume 21 Issue 12 Pages 683-691
    Published: December 20, 1977
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A persisting type of infection with wasting syndrome was established in congenitally athymic nude mice after intraperitoneal inoculation with a mouse hepatitis virus which was not fully pathogenic for heterozygous haired littermates. From the liver, spleen, lymph nodes, and brain of most infected nude mice, the virus was detected at high titers during a period from 6 to 35 days postinfection, occurrence of degenerative and necrotic lesions being correlated with virus titers in these organs. The titer of serum neutralizing antibody remained undetectable or very low in most diseased nude mice, whereas some animals resisting the infection could produce antibody at a later stage. In heterozygous haired mice, some lesions were detectable at a very early stage of infection in the spleen and liver, but they seemed to disappear with a marked elevation of the neutralizing antibody titer. Nude mice were able to resist the virus infection when they had previously received transfer of thymocytes from weanling heterozygous littermates.
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  • Yukihiro NISHIYAMA, Yasuhiko ITO, Kaoru SHIMOKATA, Ikuya NAGATA, Norik ...
    1977 Volume 21 Issue 12 Pages 693-702
    Published: December 20, 1977
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Infection of mouse L cells with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) leads to an extensive cell fusion, while porcine kidney stable (PS) cells infected with VSV show only cell rounding. Therefore, comparative morphological studies on the infection of the two cell lines were carried out using a transmission or scanning electron microscope and an immunofluorescence microscope. PS cells infected with VSV contrasted to L cells infected with the same virus in the following two points; (1) the principal site of VSV maturation was the intracytoplasmic vacuolar membrane in PS cells and the plasma membrane in L cells. However, it was found that viral glycoprotein was present on the cell surface of infected PS cells; (2) the morphological changes at the cell surface of infected PS cells occurred much earlier and were severer than those at the cell surface of infected L cells. From these observations, we discuss the possibility that the surface membrane of PS cells is too sensitive to the VSV-induced cell damage to cause cell fusion.
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  • I. Contribution of T Lymphocytes and Phagocytes at Various Stages of In fection
    Tsunenori MIYAKE, Kenji TAKEYA, Kikuo NOMOTO, Shizuko MURAOKA
    1977 Volume 21 Issue 12 Pages 703-725
    Published: December 20, 1977
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Live organisms (cfu) of Candida albicans per organ were counted 1 hr and 1 to 20 days after an intravenous inoculation into various groups of mice which had distinct levels of immunologic or non-immunologic defense mechanisms. a) The number of cfu in the liver decreased progressively in normal mice, but those in the kidney maintained a constant level during the observation period. b) The number of cfu in the liver decreased progressively also in nude mice. In their kidneys, however, cfu increased progressively at a late stage of infection. c) In lethally irradiated AKR or nude mice in which phagocyte functions were severely depressed, the number of cfu increased progressively in both liver and kidney from the initial stage of infection. d) In immunized AKR mice, growth of C. albicans was suppressed at late stages of infection. Such protective immunity could be transferred partly with immune lymphoid cells but not with hyperimmune serum in the experimental system employed. In protection against candida infection, non-immune phagocytosis and T cell-mediated immunity appear to be required at the early and late stages of infection, respectively.
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  • Tsutomu UNE, Hiroshi ZEN-YOJI, Tsutomu MARUYAMA, Yoshitoki YANAGAWA
    1977 Volume 21 Issue 12 Pages 727-729
    Published: December 20, 1977
    Released on J-STAGE: March 23, 2011
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Tadasu NUNOUE, Nagahide GOYA
    1977 Volume 21 Issue 12 Pages 731-733
    Published: December 20, 1977
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Kunihiko NAITO, Takao TSUJI, Hajime NOZAKI, Hideo NAGASHIMA
    1977 Volume 21 Issue 12 Pages 735-738
    Published: December 20, 1977
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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