MICROBIOLOGY and IMMUNOLOGY
Online ISSN : 1348-0421
Print ISSN : 0385-5600
ISSN-L : 0385-5600
Volume 23, Issue 10
Displaying 1-11 of 11 articles from this issue
  • Kuniyoshi MASUDA, Tomio KAWATA
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 941-953
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The cell wall of Lactobacillus brevis was revealed by electron microscopy to have an outer layer composed of a regular array. The morphological unit of the regular array appeared to consist of four spherical subunits, each about 2 nm in diameter, which were arranged in a tetragonal pattern about 4.5 by 7.0 nm in dimension. The regular array was composed of the tetragonal units in rows in two directions at an angle of about 75° to each other. The average spacing between the rows was about 10 nm in one direction and about 7 nm in the other. The tetragonally arranged subunits were removed from the cell wall by treatment with guanidine hydrochloride, urea, or sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) but not by the action of ethylenediaminetetraacetate, nonionic detergents, or proteolytic enzymes except pepsin. The regular subunits were shown to be composed of a protein with a molecular weight of about 51, 000 by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
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  • Marcia A. MILLER, Mohammad YOUSUF, Patricia S. GRIFFIN, Marie BARTLETT ...
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 955-964
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Synergistic antibiotic studies were undertaken to compare the effectiveness of two new β-lactamase resistant cephalosporins, cefamandole, and carbenicillin, with four aminoglycosides against clinical strains of Serratia marcescens. The strains demonstrated various combinations of resistance and/or susceptibility to the antibiotics tested. Tobramycin was the most effective aminoglycoside when used in combination with β-lactam antibiotics. Carbenicillin and cefamandole demonstrated similar activity with aminoglycosides in synergy experiments.
    Tobramycin-carbenicillin was found to be the superior pair as indicated by the total number of strains inhibited. This combination was the only one effective against certain high drug resistant strains and the strain resistant to all four aminoglycosides. Carbenicillin or cefamandole with tobramycin exhibited comparable activity against multiple drug resistant organisms. However, mutants significantly more resistant to cefamandole developed during susceptibility testing. The findings of this study have clinical relevance for treating infections by this formidable pathogen.
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  • Teruko TAMURA, Chieko KAI, Akiko SAKAGUCHI, Takuo ISHIDA, Kôsaku ...
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 965-974
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Nude mice which had received intraperitoneal injection of silica simultaneously with infection of mouse hepatitis virus, NuU strain, died of severe necrotic hepatitis within 2 weeks postinfection, whereas those having received no silica survived for 3 weeks or more after challenge. Silica given day 4 postinoculation had no effect. The virus titers of the liver and spleen at day 4 as well as serum interferon levels at day 2 were much higher in silica-treated mice than those without silica treatment. At day 2 or 3 postinoculation, silica-treated mice were found to have a considerable number of necrotic foci in the liver with some neutrophil and lymphocyte infiltration, and viral antigen was present in the cytoplasm of some hepatocytes around necrotic foci. In contrast, those without silica treatment showed only some necrotic foci with some lymphocyte infiltration. Viral antigen was detected only in a few littoral cells but not in hepatocytes. The role of macrophages in the resistance at early stage of infection in nude mice is discussed.
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  • X. Demonstration of Complement-Requiring Neutralizing (CRN) and Slow-Reacting CRN (s-CRN) Antibodies in Late IgG
    Kamesaburo YOSHINO, Noriko ISONO, Aiko TADA, Mari URAYAMA
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 975-985
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A sample of late IgG from a rabbit hyperimmunized with herpes simplex virus was analyzed for neutralizing (N) and complement-requiring neutralizing (CRN) antibodies. In a usual endpoint test, N and CRN titers were 1 : 40 and 1 : 160, respectively, but when virus-IgG mixtures were incubated at 0 C overnight before addition of complement (C), an endpoint of 1 : 1280 was obtained. Virus sensitized at 0 C overnight required more C for inactivation than did sensitized virus formed earlier. Sensitization kinetic curve experiments employing a proper initial virus concentration, which permitted differentiation of sensitized viruses requiring different amounts of C, indicated that formation of sensitized virus detectable only with a relatively large amount of C proceeded slowly at IgG dilutions where the ordinary CRN antibody requiring a smaller amount of C was negligible. The results strongly suggested that the IgG sample contained slow-reacting CRN (s-CRN) antibody in excess of the hitherto known CRN antibody. As to the mechanism of formation of s-CRN complexes, experiments failed to prove the occurrence of complexes initially insensitive to C, and it appears more likely that s-CRN antibody has a comparatively low avidity for virus.
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  • 1. Quantitative Estimation of Factor B Produced by Mouse Peritoneal Macrophages
    Yasuko KAWAMOTO, Masanaga UEDA, Hidetaka ICHIKAWA, Akio MIYAMA
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 987-995
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Cobra venom factor was used for the detection of factor B synthesized by mouse peritoneal macrophages. This method was shown to be specific for factor B assay by neutralization by antimouse factor B antibody. The amount of factor B in the culture supernatant, assessed by this method, was found to be dependent on the medium used for cultivation of macrophages. The addition of 25% L cell-conditioned medium to minimal essential medium (LCM-MEM) enhanced the production of factor B and also of lysozyme. Kinetic analysis in LCM-MEM showed that factor B produced by 6 × 104 cells/cm2 increased up to 72 hr and reached a plateau at 96 hr. The amounts of factor B and lysozyme produced in LCM-MEM depended upon the number of macrophages. Production of factor B was completely inhibited by 1μg of cycloheximide per ml and was restored by its removal.
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  • Toshiro YADOMAE, Iwao SUZUKI, Yoshio KUMAZAWA, Toshio MIYAZAKI
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 997-1008
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A water-soluble mitogen was extracted with hot-water from the fruiting bodies of a fungus, Peziza vesiculosa, collected in the wild. The active substance, named vesiculogen, was able to stimulate selectively murine B cells because mitogenic activity was observed in the spleen cell cultures of congenitally athymic nude mice, but not in the thymus cell cultures. The possibility that the mitogenicity of vesiculogen was due to lipopolysaccharide was denied completely by the following evidence : 1) lipopolysaccharide in vesiculogen was undetectable (less than 0.001 % in the Limulus test), 2) vesiculogen was able to stimulate strongly DNA synthesis of spleen cells from C3H/HeJ mice, and 3) the mitogenic activity of vesiculogen was not inhibited by polymyxin B.
    Vesiculogen increased antigen-nonspecifically the number of direct plaque forming cells to sheep erythrocytes, horse erythrocytes, and trinitrophenylated-horse erythrocytes. This result shows that vesiculogen acts as a polyclonal B cell activator on murine spleen cells.
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  • Shigekatsu WATANABE, Akihide KODA
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 1009-1022
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The slow-reacting substance of anaphylaxis (SRS-A) generated by antigen challenge of sensitized guinea pig lung fragments was partially purified and the physicochemical properties of this activity were studied. The SRS-A recovered. from antigen challenged lung preparations of 600 animals was used for the purification procedure. Treatment with organic solvents, extraction with 80% ethanol, Sephadex LH-20 chromatography with 80% ethanol, and DEAE-Sephadex A-25 chromatography in 60% methanol eluted with 0.0 to 0.1 M NaCl in 60% methanol was the purification sequence finally adopted. Overall recovery of SRS-A bioactivity was 60% with a specific activity of 2.52 units/ng of dry weight. This represented a 1.67 million-fold purification over the starting material. The DEAE Sephadex A-25 step alone provided a 7600-fold purification. This highly purified SRS-A had an apparent molecular weight of 380 to 400 daltons. The bioactivity was acid labile and alkaline stable and was blocked by low concentrations of the SRS-A antagonist FPL 55712. The SRS-A was thermostable in aqueous media and displayed enhanced bioactivity after heating at 60 C for 60 min. These results indicate that we have developed a highly efficient new approach to the isolation of guinea pig SRS-A, which also may be useful in the study of SRS-A from other tissues or species. The physicochemical properties of guinea pig SRS-A appear to be very similar to those of SRS-A from other species.
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  • Teizo FUJITA
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 1023-1031
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Immune precipitate (Ippt) formed between egg albumin and rabbit IgG antibody activated both pathways of the human complement system. On incubation with diluted serum, Ippt combined with several factors in the serum to form a complex which acquired C3-and C5-cleaving activities. In serum chelated with ethyleneglycol tetraacetic acid (EGTA), C3- and C5-cleaving activities of properdin system enzymes were formed on Ippt. Kinetic studies on the formation and the decay of C3-and C5-cleaving enzymes on Ippt revealed that C3- and C5-cleaving activities were almost dependent on the properdin system enzymes. The experiments in which C3-cleaving activity formed on Ippt was inhibited by anti-properdin or anti-B but not by anti-C4 supported the above results. The participation of the classical pathway was considered to accelerate the assembly of the properdin system enzymes.
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  • II. Priming Effect of Interferon on Apparently Noninducible Cells
    Hiroshi HASHIMOTO, Nobuyuki SHIBUKAWA, Yasuhiko KOJIMA
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 1033-1036
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Masao IINUMA, Koichiro MAENO, Hiroshi NAGURA, Toshisada MATSUMOTO
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 1037-1041
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Akira YAMASHITA, Megumu MIYAMOTO, Yuuichi HATTORI
    1979 Volume 23 Issue 10 Pages 1043-1047
    Published: October 20, 1979
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Download PDF (692K)
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