MICROBIOLOGY and IMMUNOLOGY
Online ISSN : 1348-0421
Print ISSN : 0385-5600
ISSN-L : 0385-5600
Volume 22, Issue 6
Displaying 1-9 of 9 articles from this issue
  • II. Chemical Analyses and Biological Properties of Neutral, Polar-I and Polar-II Subfractions
    Seishi KONNO
    1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 287-299
    Published: June 20, 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Lipid components obtained from Salmonella typhosa O-901 endotoxin by acid hydrolysis were separated into neutral, polar-I and polar-II lipid fractions by silica gel column chromatography. These lipids were further separated by silica gel column and/or thin-layer chromatography. The subfractions were analyzed by thin-layer chromatography, gas chromatography and infrared spectrophotometry. Seven subfractions obtained from the neutral lipid fraction contained lauric, myristic, palmitic, 3-OH-myristic acid, artificial products of 3-OH-myristic acid, or a small amount of two unidentified fatty acids. These fatty acids and glucosamine were commonly detected in six subfractions obtained from the polar-I lipid fraction. Fatty acids, glucosamine, and O-phosphorylethanolamine were detected in all of the 13 subfractions obtained from the polar-II lipid fraction. Chick embryo lethal activity, rabbit pyrogenicity and in vitro interferon inducing activity were found in three polar-I lipid subfractions and five polar-II lipid subfractions, but not in neutral lipids. The activities were highest in a polar-II lipid subfraction, which contained smaller amounts of O-phosphorylethanolamine and glucosamine than the other subfractions. However, no particular chemical constituent (s) related to the biological activities could be found. Prolonged acid hydrolysis of the polar-II lipids gave rise to neutral and polar-I lipids. Chemical and biological aspects of the lipid constituents of endotoxin are discussed.
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  • Shigeyuki HAMADA, Takashi OOSHIMA, Mitsuo TORII, Hideaki IMANISHI, Nor ...
    1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 301-314
    Published: June 20, 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Oral implantation and the cariogenic activity of clinical strains of Streptococcus mutans which had been isolated from Japanese children and labeled with streptomycin-resistance were examined in specific pathogen-free Sprague-Dawley rats. All the seven strains tested were easily implanted and persisted during the experimental period. Extensive carious lesions were produced in rats inoculated with clinical strains of S. mutans belonging to serotypes c, d, e, and f, and maintained on caries-inducing diet #2000. Noninfected rats did not develop dental caries when fed diet #2000. Type d S. mutans preferentially induced smooth surface caries in the rats. Strains of other serotypes primarily developed caries of pit and fissure origin. Caries also developed in rats inoculated with reference S. mutans strains BHTR and FAlR (type b) that had been maintained in the laboratories for many years. However, the cariogenicity of the laboratory strains was found to have decreased markedly. All three S. sanguis strains could be implanted, but only one strain induced definite fissure caries. Two S. salivarius strains could not be implanted well in the rats and therefore they were not cariogenic. Four different species of lactobacilli also failed to induce dental caries in rats subjected to similar caries test regimen on diet #2000. S. mutans strain MT6R (type c) also induce caries in golden hamsters and ICR mice, but of variable degrees.
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  • Nobuya FUJITA, Nick KARABATSOS, Robert E. SHOPE
    1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 315-323
    Published: June 20, 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Protamine treatment of type 1 dengue-infected mouse brain suspension resulted in precipitation of several viral specific activities. Complement-fixation activity was almost completely precipitated by protamine. The complement-fixation components recovered in the precipitate were comparable to a non-precipitated reference dengue 1 antigen in their homologous and heterologous reactions. Dengue hemagglutinin was also precipitated by the same treatment. The precipitated hemagglutinin was resolved into three components by buoyant density centrifugation, whose densities were 1.236, 1.215, and 1.178 g/ml, respectively. Three similar HA components were detected in non-protamine treated virus preparations. In both instances the highest-titered HA fraction possessed a buoyant density of 1.21-1.22 g/ml. These HA components were tested in the hemagglutination-inhibition reaction and were proved to be virus-specific. Cesium chloride density gradient centrifugation was shown to be useful for removing possible inhibitor (s) of viral specific hemagglutinin.
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  • Yaso CHIBA, Paul FITZPATRICK, Pratibha PATEL, Ronald SCOTT, Pearay L. ...
    1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 325-334
    Published: June 20, 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Employing the techniques of in-vitro lymphocyte transformation (LTF) and using Putnam strain of rubella virus as the antigen, the development of rubella specific cellular immune response was studied in different age groups of rubella seronegative normal subjects at various intervals after subcutaneous administration of HPV-77/DE5 live attenuated rubella vaccine. The rubella specific lymphocyte response in children ranging in age from two to twelve years was characterized by significant LTF activity at two months, followed by a gradual decrease. The response in adult subjects 18 to 35 years of age showed a slight delay initially in the appearance and the maximum LTF activity appeared to be 3-4 fold lower (P<0.01) than observed in the children. No difference was observed in the maximum antibody titers to rubella virus between these two groups of subjects. These observations suggest that the age related differences in the lymphoproliferative responses might be associated with adverse effects which are known to occur more frequently in adolescent and older patients than in childhood population after vaccine induced rubella infection.
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  • Ken-ichi YAMAMOTO, Mitsuaki KAKINUMA
    1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 335-348
    Published: June 20, 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Intravenous injection of mice with BCG cell wall vaccine induces granuloma in the lung. The granuloma induced as measured by lung weight showed marked strain differences; C3H/HeMs bred in this Institute (C3H), C3HeB/FeJ, P/J and A/He were low responders, whereas C57BL/6 and AKR/He were high responders. When C57BL/6 and C3H were compared, the responsiveness appeared to be inherent in each strain of mice providing strong evidence for genetic control in this phenomenon. Breeding experiments suggested that multiple loci, including a MHC-linked locus, were involved although the role of the MHC-linked loci was marginal.
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  • 1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 347
    Published: 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Izumi NAKASHIMA, Nobuo KATO
    1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 349-356
    Published: June 20, 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Using the hapten-carrier system in which the dinitrophenyl group (DNP) served as a B cell reactive hapten and bovine serum albumin (BSA) or human gammaglobulin (HGG) as a T cell reactive carrier, changes in the hapten-specific memory (B cell-associated memory) and the carrier-specific memory (T cell-associated memory) after a secondary antigenic stimulus were analyzed in mice. Since an immunological adjuvant was indispensable in the induction of the primary increase in memory, antigen used for the primary antigenic stimulus was injected together with the capsular polysaccharide of Klebsiella pneumoniae (CPS-K) which has already been shown to exhibit a potent adjuvant effect. With the cell-transfer technique, it was found that the cell-associated hapten-specific memory for anti-DNP antibody response to DNP-BSA was truly amplified by the secondary injection of DNP-HGG into mice primed with DNP-HGG, and that the cell-associated carrier-specific memory as judged by the helper effect on anti-DNP response to DNP-BSA was also truly amplified by the secondary injection of BSA into mice primed with BSA. However, when memory was assessed in actively immunized mice, the secondary injection of BSA into mice primed with DNP-BSA and HGG decreased anti-DNP responsiveness to the tertiary injection of DNP-BSA, whereas the secondary injection of DNP-HGG secondarily increased anti-DNP responsiveness. In mice primed with DNP-BSA the titers of serum antibodies to BSA increased after the secondary injection of DNP-BSA or BSA. From these results it has been concluded that, like B cell-associated memory, T cell-associated memory is also amplified by a secondary antigenic stimulus, although its expression is inhibited in actively immunized mice through negative control by their antibodies.
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  • Gihei SATO, Masayoshi ASAGI, Chiaki OKA, Naotaka ISHIGURO, Nobuyuki TE ...
    1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 357-360
    Published: June 20, 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: March 23, 2011
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Masami TAKAHASHI, Sachiye IWAMI, Kosaku YOSHIDA
    1978 Volume 22 Issue 6 Pages 361-363
    Published: June 20, 1978
    Released on J-STAGE: March 23, 2011
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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