Abstract

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) extracted with phenol and water from Yersinia pestis was compared with LPS of Escherichia coli for stimulation of deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis in mouse spleen cells (lymphocyte mitogenesis), gelation of limulus lysate, pyrogenicity in the rabbit, and susceptibility to inhibition of these activities by polymyxin B sulfate (PBS). LPS of Y. pestis stimulated deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis in mouse spleen cell cultures over the same quantitative range as LPS of E. coli. In the limulus tests and rabbit pyrogenicity studies, the LPS of Y. pestis was active but about 10 times less potent than E. coli LPS on a weight basis. PBS in concentrations from 1 to 10 microgram/ml diminished the rate of deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis in spleen cell cultures stimulated by LPS of both Y. pestis and E. coli. Addition of PBS to LPS of both Y. pestis and E. coli in a ratio of 100 parts of PBS to 1 part of LPS by weight increased by 10-fold the concentration of LPS required to produce gelation of limulus lysate and inhibited significantly pyrogenic responses in rabbits. These results demonstrating similarities of LPS of Y. pestis and E. coli may suggest that the pathogenesis of plague is similar to that of other gram-negative bacterial infections.

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