MICROBIOLOGY and IMMUNOLOGY
Online ISSN : 1348-0421
Print ISSN : 0385-5600
ISSN-L : 0385-5600
Volume 24, Issue 12
Displaying 1-11 of 11 articles from this issue
  • Masayuki NAKAMURA, Mitsuo FUKAZAWA, Haruo YOSHIMURA, Tetsuo KOEDA
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1131-1138
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Drug resistance in Escherichia coli strains isolated from pet birds (mynahs, macaws, finches, common bengals, parrots, and flamingos) imported into Japan from 10 foreign countries in 1977 and 1978 was investigated. Of the 309 strains isolated from 127 pet birds in the Animal Quarantine Service, 232 (75.1 %) were drug resistant. Furthermore, strains resistant to oxytetracycline hydrochloride, dihydrostreptomycin, and sulfadimethoxine were relatively common. Resistance patterns varied from single to sextuple resistance, and 148 (63.8%) of the resistant strains had conjugative R plasmids. These results suggest that the high incidence of drug resistance and R plasmids in E. coli strains isolated from these pet birds may be a reflection of the prophylactic use of antibiotics for the prevention of diseases which increasingly occur with importation of the birds. Furthermore, the results suggest that the birds may be potential reservoirs of drug-resistant E. coli for families who raise and have intimate contact with such birds.
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  • Tomoko YAMAMOTO, Somay YAMAGATA, Yohko HASHIMOTO, Saburo YAMAGISHI
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1139-1149
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This paper reports the cleavage maps of ampicillin transposons Tn2601 and Tn2602, for restriction endonucleases BamHI, PvuII, AvaI, HincII, and HaeII. Both of the transposons are very similar to the well-known ampicillin transposon Tn3 in size, endonuclease cleavage sites, and possession of a short inverted repeat sequence at both ends. A slight difference in the cleavage pattern among these three transposons was observed in the region around the BamHI site which was assumed to be a part of the repressor gene for transposition.
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  • Fuminori KANETSUNA
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1151-1162
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The effect of lysozyme on the growth of several strains of mycobacteria was examined at pH 5.0-7.0 in Dubos medium containing various concentrations of lysozyme (100-2, 000 μg/ml). Mycobacterium smegmatis and M. phlei were susceptible to lysozyme at pH 5.0-7.0. The effect of lysozyme was marked between pH 6.0 and 7.0 and the colony counts were reduced to approximately 0.1-10% after incubation with 100 μg of lysozyme per ml for 48 hr. At pH 5.0, 10-40% of the organisms survived treatment with 1, 000μg of lysozyme per ml for 48 hr. M. bovis strain BCG, M. tuberculosis, and M. fortuitum appeared to be more resistant to lysozyme than M. smegmatis and M. phlei.
    M. smegmatis and M. phlei did not contain detectable amounts of poly-L-glutamic acid, although the susceptibility of the mycobacteria to lysozyme did not correlate with the amounts of the polymer in the cell walls.
    The role of lysozyme in animal infections with so-called saprophytic mycobacteria is discussed.
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  • Takashi KAWANA, Kamesaburo YOSHINO
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1163-1174
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A simple method of estimating type-specific neutralizing antibody to type 2 herpes simplex virus (HSV-2) was devised with the use of the microneutralization system. Serially diluted serum was mixed in the well with a constant amount of type 1 virus (HSV-1), and after 3 days' incubation at 37 C, the plate was irradiated with ultraviolet light. The absorbing HSV-1 consisted of culture fluid plus an extract of infected Vero cells not especially concentrated. The well then received indicator HSV-1 or HSV-2, and after being left at 37 C for 1 hr a suspension of dispersed Vero cells was dropped into the wells, following our standard neutralization procedure. Preliminary tests with rabbit antisera showed that even a low level of HSV-2 antibody was detected by this method, unless an exceptionally high titer of HSV-1 antibody originally coexisted with the HSV-2 antibody. Sera from acutely infected persons testified to the specificity of the antibody so detected. It was revealed by means of the new technique that the rate of HSV-2 antibody was significantly higher in uterine cervical cancer patients than in control women. There was no correlation between the clinical stage of cervical cancer and the presence of HSV-2 antibody.
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  • Tadashi KASAHARA, Hirotomo HARADA, Kohei SHIOIRI-NAKANO, Yoshihisa ITO ...
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1175-1183
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Responses of neonatal and adult lymphocytes to various mitogens were studied. Lymphocytes from umbilical cord blood (UCB) responded well to both phytohemagglutinin and concanavalin A, and also to pokeweed mitogen and Staphylococcus aureus Protein A. The responses of UCB lymphocytes to these mitogens were not significantly lower than those of adult peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). In contrast, UCB lymphocytes showed only a minimal response to killed Staphylococcus aureus Cowan I (SpA CoI), a potent B-cell mitogen for human PBL, although the proportion of B cells in UCB was not less than that in PBL. The low level of response of lymphocytes from UCB to SpA CoI was not ascribed to differences in dose response or kinetics. Purified B cells from UCB were not stimulated by SpA CoI either, suggesting that the low responsiveness was not due to the suppressive effect of T cells or macrophages, but to some intrinsic defect in B cells in UCB. These results suggest that the B cells in neonates may be more immature than the T cells.
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  • Takao MATSUMOTO, Masayasu NAKANO
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1185-1197
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Treatment of mice with 0.01-1 μg of a synthetic serum thymic factor (FTS) significantly increased their resistance to lethal doses (1-5 × 106 organisms) of Salmonella typhimurium LT2 (LT2). At least seven injections of FTS were necessary for induction of resistance, since the effects of one to three injections were variable. FTS additively potentiated the protective immunity to LT2 induced by immunization with an avirulent mutant of LT2, irrespective of the structural components of the cell wall lipopolysaccharides of the mutants, which are basically correlated with their immunogenicity and virulence. Activated macrophages may have a direct role in the induction of host resistance, since peritoneal macrophages from FTS-treated DBA/2 mice which are resistant to the doses of LT2 used could by themselves retard bacterial growth in vitro, whereas those from CBA/N mice which are relatively susceptible to LT2 did not inhibit bacterial growth without intervention of FTS-treated syngeneic T cells.
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  • Ryushi T. NOZAWA, Nobuko YANAKI, Takeshi YOKOTA
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1199-1209
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Normal, thioglycollate-stimulated and BCG-activated mouse peritoneal macrophages were cultivated in vitro with the conditioned medium of mouse L-929 cells. The thioglycollate- and BCG-macrophages rapidly proliferated, whereas normal macrophages grew more slowly. A clear morphological difference between the three types of macrophages in the culture was observed. Glucocorticoids inhibited the growth of the macrophages at pharmacological concentrations. Other steroids, progesterone, diethylstilbestrol and testosterone in that order, had a far lower growth-inhibiting effect. Macrophages cultured with 10-6 M dexamethasone had a reduced antimicrobial effect on Candida parapsilosis compared with that of the untreated cells. Choleragen had the same effect on the macrophages as glucocorticoids. The toxin inhibited growth at a concentration as low as 10 pg/ml and cells treated with 1 ng of choleragen per ml had decreased antifungal activity. Similarly, Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide at 10 ng/ml inhibited the growth of thioglycollate-macrophages. However, macrophages incubated with the lipopolysaccharide had enhanced anticandida activity. Thus, the immunosuppressors glucocorticoid and choleragen inhibited both the increase in the number of macrophages and the microbicidal activity of the phagocytes. Lipopolysaccharide, an immunostimulant, stimulated macrophage activity, but was toxic for cell growth.
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  • Takehiko UCHIYAMA
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1211-1222
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The mechanisms of B cell tolerance were studied in an attempt to learn whether B cells rendered tolerant are present in the immune system in a potentially responsive form. The author tested the in vitro anti-trinitrophenyl (TNP) antibody-forming cell (anti-TNP AFC) response to TNP-immunogens and polyclonal B cell activators (PBA) of spleen cells taken from mice injected with a tolerogen, TNP-carboxymethylcellulose (TNP-CMC). Spleen cells from mice injected 5 days previously with 10 μg of TNP-CMC did not respond to TNP-sheep red blood cells (TNP-SRBC), T-dependent (TD) antigen or TNP-Ficoll, T-independent (TI) antigen. However, the same spleen cells responded to PBA, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of Salmonella enteritidis and purified protein derivative (PPD) of BCG. The results indicate that B cells specific for TNP are present in a potentially responsive form. Spleen cells from mice injected with 500 μg of TNP-CMC did not respond to either TNP-immunogens or PBA. The state of unresponsiveness to PBA lasted for 12 days after the tolerogen injection. Responsiveness to PBA reappeared within the short period of 2 days, whereas unresponsiveness to TNP-immunogens lasted much longer. Unresponsiveness to PBA was relieved considerably by treating tolerant spleen cells with the proteolytic enzyme trypsin before in vitro stimulation. These results indicate that B cells rendered refractory are present in the immune system in a potentially responsive form.
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  • II. The Secretion of Factor B by Lipopolysaccharide-Stimulated Macrophages
    Akio MIYAMA, Yasuko KAWAMOTO, Hidetaka ICHIKAWA, Keinosuke OKAMOTO, Su ...
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1223-1232
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The secretion of factor B by mouse peritoneal macrophages was found to be enhanced following in vivo or in vitro stimulation with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The intravenous administration of LPS to mice of various strains caused an increased release of factor B but not the release of acid phosphatase by the peritoneal macrophages obtained from the stimulated mice. In vitro stimulation of cultured macrophages with LPS resulted in an enhanced secretion of both factor B and acid phosphatase. The dose-dependent augmentation of factor B secretion by LPS was found in the macrophages from LPS-responsive C3H/HeN mice, whereas the macrophages from LPS-unresponsive C3H/HeJ mice did not respond to either phenol-extracted LPS or butanol-extracted LPS. The ability of LPS to cause the enhancement of factor B secretion by macrophages was abolished by alkali or acid treatment of LPS, indicating that its lipid A part was responsible for the observed effect.
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  • Nobuyuki TERAKADO, Hisashi UEDA, Yasuro ISAYAMA, Shigeo ARAI
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1233-1236
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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  • Shoji SHIMIZU, Yasushi OBARA, Haruhide KAWABE, Keiji FUKASAWA, Susumu ...
    1980Volume 24Issue 12 Pages 1237-1239
    Published: December 20, 1980
    Released on J-STAGE: October 15, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
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