An immunological relationship between the group A streptococcus and mammalian muscle

JB Zabriskie, EH Freimer - The Journal of experimental medicine, 1966 - rupress.org
JB Zabriskie, EH Freimer
The Journal of experimental medicine, 1966rupress.org
By means of the immunofluorescent staining technique, antisera to a wide variety of
serological types of Group A and A variant streptococci were found to contain an antibody
which reacted with mammalian striated muscle, both skeletal and cardiac, as well as with
smooth muscle in the endocardium and in the media of arterioles. Similar heart-reactive
antibodies were not present in antisera to most other groups of hemolytic streptococci and to
other Gram-positive cocci. Chemical and serological studies clearly pointed to the cell …
By means of the immunofluorescent staining technique, antisera to a wide variety of serological types of Group A and A variant streptococci were found to contain an antibody which reacted with mammalian striated muscle, both skeletal and cardiac, as well as with smooth muscle in the endocardium and in the media of arterioles. Similar heart-reactive antibodies were not present in antisera to most other groups of hemolytic streptococci and to other Gram-positive cocci. Chemical and serological studies clearly pointed to the cell (protoplast) membrane of the Group A streptococcus as the locus of the antigenic determinant of this heart-reactive antibody. In addition, preliminary studies suggested that the reaction between this streptococcal antibody and cardiac tissue represented an immunological relationship between the sarcolemma, the membrane of a mammalian muscle cell and the cell membrane of a bacterium, the hemolytic streptococcus.
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