REVERSIBLE INACTIVATION OF THE SUBSTANCE INDUCING TRANSFORMATION OF PNEUMOCOCCAL TYPES
Open Access
- 1 May 1945
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 81 (5) , 501-514
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.81.5.501
Abstract
1. The transforming substance of Pneumococcus Type III is inactivated by treatment with ascorbic acid. This effect of ascorbic acid is catalyzed by traces of cupric ion and is prevented by the presence of sulfhydryl compounds. 2. Under certain conditions, the activity of transforming substance treated with ascorbic acid can be restored by the use of glutathione and other sulfhydryl compounds. 3. Other compounds, such as catechol, hydroquinone, and p-phenylenediamine, which undergo autoxidation similar to that of ascorbic acid, have an analogous effect on the transforming substance. 4. The effect of these compounds on the transforming substance is nullified by exclusion of oxygen or by the use of catalase. 5. It is concluded that inactivation of the transforming substance is probably oxidative in character and depends on the formation of peroxides in the course of autoxidation of ascorbic acid or related compounds. 6. The relation of this phenomenon to that of the inactivation of other biologically active substances by ascorbic acid is discussed.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- STUDIES ON THE CHEMICAL NATURE OF THE SUBSTANCE INDUCING TRANSFORMATION OF PNEUMOCOCCAL TYPESThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1944
- Urease Activity and Ascorbic AcidNature, 1944
- ON THE INACTIVATION OF ASCORBIC ACID OXIDASEThe Journal of general physiology, 1944
- Studies on the Inactivation of Diphtheria Toxin by Vitamin C (I-Ascorbic Acid)The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1941
- The reversible inhibition of β-malt-amylase by ascorbic acid and related compoundsBiochemical Journal, 1935