Abstract

Non-glass-adherent cells (lymphocytes) of peritoneal exudates from guinea pigs infected with bacillus of Calmette-Guerin (BCG), stimulated in vitro by specific (tuberculin) or nonspecific phytohemagglutinin P (PHA) mitogens, conferred on glass-adherent cell (macrophage) cultures from BCG-infected, or homologous, noninfected guinea pigs the ability to sterilize Listeria monocytogenes. Lymphocytes from noninfected guinea pigs, stimulated by mitogens, had little or no activity in this test system, although the adherent monolayer cells were seen to be “activated” by morphologic criteria when PHA was employed. Phagocytosis of the bacteria was inhibited in sterilizing macrophage-lymphocyte cultures even after washing of the cultures had eliminated most of the cell clusters seen in activated cultures. However, the monolayers, before and after washing, were found to produce a soluble, filtrable factor(s) which sterilized the listeria. This activity was detectable as early as 17 hr in mixed-cell culture filtrates, and 42-hr monolayers continued to generate this active material after repeated washings with fresh medium up to 72 hr. No listeria-sterilizing activity was found in filtrates of mitogen-stimulated nonadherent lymphocyte cultures without macrophages, and such filtrates were not active in stimulating macrophage monolayers to produce the material although the cells in such monolayers were seen to manifest increased surface adherence and spreading characteristic of “activated” macrophages. Also, such culture filtrates were shown not to antagonize the antibacterial activity of listeria-sterilizing filtrates. Preliminary characterization of the listeria-sterilizing material revealed the following: (a) a molecular weight of 50,000 or more; (b) stable at 56 °C for 30 min in medium containing serum; (c) bound to the bacterial cells at 0 °C; (d) inactivated by the strong reducing agent, dithiothreitol, and partially reactivated by H 2O 2 oxidation; (e) partially antagonized by deoxyribonucleic acid; (f) inactive against two species, of salmonella; (g) not inhibited or enhanced by listeria-agglutinating antibodies.

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