A STUDY OF EFFECTS OF SALT AND OF PH ON PRECIPITATION OF ANTIGEN - ANTIBODY COMPOUNDS
- 1 January 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 8 (2) , 170-+
Abstract
Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) combines with its homologous antibody to much the same extent irrespective of whether or not salt is present, but without salt the complex not only fails to precipitate, but the virus particles do not aggregate. TMV-antibody precipitate formed in the presence of salt, like that formed between human serum albumin (HSA) and its homologous antibody, dissolves when suspended in distilled water to form stable and transparent solutions, although the precipitate may not disaggregate completely. To dissolve HSA-antibody complex in distilled water, the pH of the water must be raised to about 7. 0. At pH near 6. 0, HSA-antibody complex precipitates even in the absence of salt, but the precipitate dissolves immediately when the pH is raised to 7. 0. All these facts are incompatible with the theory of precipitation based on the "lattice hypothesis", and argue strongly in favour of the theory that antigen-antibody complexes are hydrophobic and, as such, flocculate when sufficiently discharged either by salt or by suitably adjusting the pH of the medium.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- SEROLOGIC DEMONSTRATION OF DUAL SPECIFICITY OF RABBIT BIVALENT HYBRID ANTIBODYThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1964
- Recombination of a mixture of univalent antibody fragments of different specificityArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1961
- SEROLOGICAL BEHAVIOUR OF TOBACCO MOSAIC VIRUS AND OF ITS PROTEIN FRAGMENTS1961
- A graphical method for the rapid determination of sedimentation coefficientsBiochemical Journal, 1960
- An electrophoretic study of the mechanism of precipitin reactions: variation in reversibility.1959
- THE ANTIGEN-ANTIBODY REACTION .1. THE INFLUENCE OF SODIUM CHLORIDE CONCENTRATION ON THE QUANTITATIVE PRECIPITIN REACTION1952
- A quantitative study of complex formation in heated protein mixturesBiochemical Journal, 1949
- Combination between different proteins and between proteins and yeast nucleic acidBiochemical Journal, 1946
- The effect of salts on the formation of protein complexes during heat denaturationBiochemical Journal, 1943
- AN ELECTROPHORETIC STUDY OF IMMUNE SERA AND PURIFIED ANTIBODY PREPARATIONSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1939