Abstract

A patient with cutaneous vasculitis during infective endocarditis due to Lactobacillus casei was studied. Immune complexes (IC) were isolated from serum at the time of diagnosis and after 4 wk of therapy. Purification of IC used differential polyethylene glycol precipitation and competitive binding to staphylococcal protein A. In situ radioiodination of IC was performed, followed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Anti-IC antisera were raised in rabbits by immunization with purified IC. IC were characterized by SDS-PAGE followed by electrophoretic transfer to nitrocellulose, incubation with antiserum and then with 125I protein A, and autoradiography. Although early and late IC differed quantitatively, there were no differentiating immunochemical features. Both IC contained a 60,000 dalton component that did not react with preimmune serum nor with anti-normal human serum. This component reacted with antiserum rendered specific for L. casei by affinity chromatography. The restricted antigen-antibody representation in IC contrasted with a wider panel of antibody activity in patient serum. The Western blot analysis proves to be an ideal method for the characterization of IC because of its sensitivity, dissociative capability, and preservation of immunoreactivity. IC isolated at a time removed from the original antigenic challenge may provide insight into the nature of the inciting antigen.

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