Immunogenicity of Formaldehyde-Inactivated Enterotoxins A and C1 of Staphylococcus aureus

Abstract
Quantitative precipitation of antisera specific for native enterotoxin revealed that 70% and 60%, respectively, of the antigenic determinants of enterotoxins A and C1 of Staphylococcus aureus were inactivated by formaldehyde at pH 5.0, 80% and 85%, respectively, at pH 7.5, and nearly 100% at pH 9.5. Enterotoxin C1 inactivated by formaldehyde at pH 5.0 or 7.5 contained large polymers (excluded by Sepharose 2B) and induced strong humoral immune responses in rhesus monkeys. Enterotoxin A inactivated at pH 5.0 or 7.5 was composed mostly of small polymers (excluded by Sephadex G-IOO but included by Sepharose 2B); it provoked a poor immune response in monkeys (about equivalent to the response obtained with weakly reactive toxin inactivated at alkaline pH). It was concluded that potent enterotoxoids were formed by extensive cross-linking of enterotoxin Ct into large polymers in acidic or neutral formaldehyde solution.

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