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J Bacteriol. 1962 December; 84(6): 1245-1250
Copyright © 1963, The Williams & Wilkins Company. All Rights Reserved.

IMMUNOLOGICAL STUDIES OF A HETEROGENETIC ENTEROBACTERIAL ANTIGEN (KUNIN)

H. Y. Whang1 and E. Neter2

Department of Bacteriology, University of Buffalo Medical School; Statler Research Laboratories, Children's Hospital; and Laboratory of Bacteriology (Medicine C), Roswell Park Memorial Institute, State Department of Health, Buffalo, New York
Department of Pediatrics, University of Buffalo Medical School; Statler Research Laboratories, Children's Hospital; and Laboratory of Bacteriology (Medicine C), Roswell Park Memorial Institute, State Department of Health, Buffalo, New York

ABSTRACT

WHANG, H. Y. (Children's Hospital, Buffalo, N.Y.) AND E. NETER. Immunological studies of a heterogenetic enterobacterial antigen (Kunin). J. Bacteriol. 84:1245–1250. 1962.—Study of the heterogenetic antigen revealed that it is present in relatively large amounts in supernatant fluids of heat-killed, agar-grown enterobacterial suspensions. The antigen modifies erythrocytes for agglutination by heterogenetic antibodies in Escherichia coli O14 antiserum. Of the highly purified lipopolysaccharides (10 µg/ml) tested, only a Shigella sonnei preparation had significant activity. In the hemagglutination-inhibition test, minimal activity was detected also in lipopoly-saccharides from E. coli O111 and various salmonellase. There was no parallelism in capacity of these lipopolysaccharides to neutralize heterogenetic and homologous O antibodies. The hemolytic modification of the hemagglutination test proved to be from two to eight times more sensitive than the hemagglutination method. Supernatant fluids of unheated agar-grown suspensions contained small amounts of antigen, and boiling of the bacterial suspensions resulted in the release of additional and substantial quantities. Heterogenetic antibodies did not cause agglutination of latex particles treated with heterogenetic antigen, but E. coli O14 antibodies agglutinated latex particles treated with the corresponding O antigen.


J Bacteriol. 1962 December; 84(6): 1245-1250
Copyright © 1963, The Williams & Wilkins Company. All Rights Reserved.




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