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. 1976 Oct;14(4):1065-70.
doi: 10.1128/iai.14.4.1065-1070.1976.

Mechanisms of immunity in typhus infections. V. Demonstration of Rickettsia mooseri-specific antibodies in convalescent mouse and human serum cytophilic for mouse peritoneal macrophages

Mechanisms of immunity in typhus infections. V. Demonstration of Rickettsia mooseri-specific antibodies in convalescent mouse and human serum cytophilic for mouse peritoneal macrophages

L Beaman et al. Infect Immun. 1976 Oct.

Abstract

Antibodies in both mouse and human Rickettsia mooseri (Rickettsia typhi) convalescent serum that were cytophilic for mouse macrophages were demonstrated by the rosette technique. Mouse peritoneal macrophages, passively sensitized with early and late serum from mice with a sublethal infection of R. mooseri, were washed and exposed to rickettsiae. Rosettes of rickettsiae were found around macrophages, maintained at 4 degrees C, which had been sensitized with immune serum (direct sensitization of macrophages), but no rosettes were found around macrophages sensitized with serum from normal mice. When the macrophages were maintained at 34 degrees C after addition of the rickettsiae, phagocytosis of rickettsiae occurred, indicating one probable role for cytophilic antibodies in typhus infections. If the rickettsiae were mixed with serum from infected mice, washed, and then added to macrophages (indirect sensitization of macrophages), more rosettes were found around the macrophages than around directly sensitized macrophages. The presence of mouse immunoglobulin G on the macrophage surface was also shown by staining living sensitized macrophages with rabbit fluroescein-conjugated anti-mouse immunoglobulin G.

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References

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