Abstract

Rabbits immunized by the intr a cutaneous injection of heat-killed encapsulated pneumococci fail to develop the type-specific carbohydrate antibodies which result from the intravenous injection of the same antigen.1 An attempt was made to follow the fate of pneumococci injected into the skin, in the hope of determining the cause of this lack of type-specific antigenic response.Heat-killed cells of pneumococcus Type I were injected at several sites into the skin of a rabbit. The injected areas were excised at different intervals of time and films made from the tissue fragments were stained by the Gram technic. There was, of course, a pronounced polymorphonuclear infiltration at the site of injection. The pneumococci were seen to undergo a process of extracellular digestion which began within 24 hours after injection and was completed in 4 to 5 days; many bacteria became Gram negative before being engulfed by the leucocytes. These observations suggested that leucocytes produce ferments capable of attacking ...

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