ON THE MECHANISM OF SPECIFIC PRECIPITATION
Open Access
- 1 April 1942
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 75 (4) , 407-419
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.75.4.407
Abstract
A study of the precipitability by the appropriate antisera of 34 different haptens, containing from one to six reactive groups, leads to the conclusion that the possibility of framework ("lattice") formation is neither necessary nor sufficient for specific precipitation, but that instead precipitation depends upon the reduction, by mutual neutralization of polar groups of antibody and antigen (or hapten) and mechanical blocking off of polar groups of closely neighboring molecules of antibody, of the solubility of the complex below the point at which it can remain in solution. The decisive factors appear to be the number of polar groups of the antigen (hapten) left free, and the distance separating the different reactive groups, which determines the amount of steric hindrance exerted by one antibody molecule on another. No hypothesis is offered as to how these primary insoluble aggregates unite with each other to produce the larger aggregates which are finally observed.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Serological Reactions with Simple Substances Containing Two or More Haptenic GroupsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1941
- A Theory of the Structure and Process of Formation of Antibodies*Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1940
- SOME EFFECTS OF FORMALDEHYDE ON HORSE ANTIPNEUMOCOCCUS SERUM AND DIPHTHERIA ANTITOXIN, AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCE FOR THE THEORY OF ANTIGEN-ANTIBODY AGGREGATIONThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1938
- THE PRECIPITIN REACTION BETWEEN TYPE III PNEUMOCOCCUS POLYSACCHARIDE AND HOMOLOGOUS ANTIBODYThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1935
- SEROLOGICAL REACTIONS WITH SIMPLE CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS (PRECIPITIN REACTIONS)The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1932