A HEMOLYTIC SYSTEM ASSOCIATED WITH ENTERITIS IN RABBITS
Open Access
- 1 April 1963
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 117 (4) , 647-661
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.117.4.647
Abstract
A disease characterized by frequent association of enteritis and polyagglutinable cells often develops in weanling rabbits. The red cell lesion renders the cells susceptible to agglutination and hemolysis in normal rabbit sera. The degree of red cell abnormality varies among different animals and disappears when the animals recover. The abnormality of the red cells responsible for their polyagglutinability and susceptibility to hemolysis was resistant to the action of trypsin or papain and persisted in heated stroma preparations derived from polyagglutinable cells. The factors necessary for agglutination and hemolysis of the polyagglutinable cells are present in normal rabbit sera but are lacking in the sera of affected rabbits. These factors returned to normal levels as the polyagglutinable cell lesion disappeared. The sera of rabbits with polyagglutinable cells contained normal levels of complement and properdin. Whereas the agglutinating factor in normal sera is heat-stable at 56°C for 30 minutes, the hemolytic factor is heat labile. The hemolytic factor is apparently distinct from complement and properdin since it was adsorbed from normal rabbit serum by zymosan or by polyagglutinable cells at 0°C. However, complement was fixed when normal rabbit serum was reacted with stroma from polyagglutinable cells. Hemolysis of polyagglutinable cells by normal rabbit serum at 25°C was inhibited by preliminary incubation of the mixture at 0°C prior to incubation at 25°C. Evidence was obtained which indicated that this inhibition was due to progression of a reaction involving Ca++ independent of a reaction involving Mg++.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- HEMAGGLUTINATION BY MIXTURES OF HUMAN GAMMA-GLOBULIN AND HETEROGENETIC BACTERIAL ANTIGEN1962
- THE PROPERDIN SYSTEM AND IMMUNITYThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1956
- Alterations in Serum Properdin Levels Following Injection of ZymosanScience, 1955