Abstract

In penicillin-susceptible bacteria, penicillin causes growth of a small fraction of cells as wall-deficient forms if an appropriate osmoprotection is provided (unstable L-forms). A subfraction of human serum high density lipoprotein (HDL 3) was shown to have the ability to inactivate unstable L-forms of Staphylococcus aureus. The active principle was distinguishable from the well-documented trypanosome lytic factor 1 with respect to density, size, and other properties. This L-form cytotoxicity therefore seems to represent a novel antimicrobial entity in human serum.

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