Abstract

Two to 4 mg/ml of an antibacterial agent occurring in the serum of humans and animals caused the clotting of citrated rabbit, human, calf, ox, sheep, goat, guinea pig, rat, mouse, horse, chicken, pigeon and swine plasma. Heparinized plasmas of the same species were found resistant to the clotting action of the antibacterial agent. Citrated plasma previously heated at 56 C for 30 min, treated with 640 units/ml tyrosinase for 60 min, or absorbed with 0.2M Ca3(PO4)2 and 0.2M Mg(OH)2 was also found resistant to the clotting action of the antibacterial agent. The clotting action of the antibacterial agent was not affected by heating at 66 C for 60 min, nor by multiple passage through Seitz filters. The coagulation of citrated plasma proceeded most rapidly with 0.2M Tris(hydroxymethyl)-amino-methane buffer, pH 7 to 9, or distilled water as the antibacterial agent solvent; 0.2M phosphate buffer, pH 6 to 8, reduced the clotting action of the antibacterial agent, while 0.2M citrate-phosphate buffer, pH 4.0, or 0.2M carbonate-bicarbonate buffer, pH 10.0, inhibited entirely the clotting activity of this agent.

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