Abstract

The hemagglutinating activity of Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin (CPE) was studied after trypsin treatment. Untreated CPE did not show any hemagglutinating activity to human type A, B, and O, sheep, chicken, horse, guinea-pig, or rabbit erythrocytes. Trypsinized CPE resulted in a more than 100-fold increase in hemagglutinating activity with rabbit erythrocytes only. Other erythrocytes and trypsinized rabbit erythrocytes were not agglutinated at all. The hemagglutinating activity of CPE was also found on treatment with a lysine-specific proteinase. On the other hand, trypsinized CPE did not significantly increase the cytotoxic and enterotoxic activities. The binding reaction between trypsinized and rabbit erythrocytes was not inhibited by any mono-, di-, or polysaccharides, glycoproteins or ganglioside mixtures. These results suggest that the hydrolysis of bonds involving lysine residues is mainly required for hemagglutinating activity, and that the receptor for trypsinized CPE on rabbit erythrocytes is probably the protein moiety.

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