Abstract

Subpatent persistence of parasitemia was detected for up to 7 weeks after infection of BALB/c mice with Plasmodium yoelii. Serum taken from recovered mice maintained parasitemias in recipient mice at a subpatent level when transferred repeatedly at 2-day intervals. Single doses of serum from convalescent donors delayed the course of infection in recipients. Small doses of transferred hyperimmune serum had the same effect, whereas large doses (>0.5 ml) totally suppressed parasitemia. Only a single secondary challenge of recovered mice was required in order to produce a maximally protective hyperimmune serum. Mice completely protected from a primary challenge with P. yoelii by transfer of hyperimmune serum were not at all resistant to a second challenge given some weeks later. After transfer of hyperimmune serum into mice with established P. yoelii infection, parasitemia fell to subpatent levels within 48 hr. During the first 21 hr after serum transfer, a progressive reduction in the proportion of ring forms present in blood smears was observed.

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