Abstract

1. Three random linear copolymers composed of two or three of the amino acids d-tyrosine, d-glutamic acid, d-alanine and d-lysine, and a branched multichain copolymer with a poly-d-lysine backbone and polymeric side chains of d-tyrosine and d-glutamic acid, were found to be non-antigenic in rabbits, by precipitin and passive cutaneous anaphylaxis, and in guinea pigs, by delayed hypersensitivity tests. The corresponding four copolymers of l-amino acids were shown to be antigenic by all the three criteria. 2. No immunological cross-reactions were observed between the polypeptides composed of d-amino acids and the corresponding l-amino acid copolymers. 3. Similarly, an azobenzenearsonic acid conjugate of poly-d-tyrosine was shown to be non-antigenic in guinea pigs, in contrast with an analogous conjugate of poly-l-tyrosine. Animals sensitized with the conjugate of poly-l-tyrosine did not exhibit delayed skin reactions, when cross-tested with the d-conjugate. 4. A linear polymer composed of d-tyrosine, l-glutamic acid and l-alanine was found to be immunogenic and to cross-react with the corresponding polymer composed exclusively of d-amino acids.

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