Abstract
The relation of naturally acquired host IgG in the surface coat of bloodstream forms of Trypanosoma lewisi to ablastin was studied to determine whether, contrary to a long-held conclusion, the antibody is avid and adsorbable. It was found by immunofluorescence and agglutination tests with monospecific antisera to rat IgG that bloodstream forms collected from immunosuppressed hosts, in contrast to those from immunocompetent hosts, have little or no detectable surface IgO. Specificity of adsorption was also demonstrated in other immunofluorescence experiments in which bloodstream forms from immunosuppressed hosts adsorbed IgG from immune serum with ablastic activity only (previously adsorbed with trypanosomes from immunocompetent hosts to remove the trypanocidal antibodies), but did not adsorb IgG from normal rat serum. To determine whether this specific adsorption of IgG by the parasite could be correlated with a reduction in ablastic activity, immune sera were adsorbed with bloodstream forms from immunosuppressed hosts at packed cell/serum ratios of either 1.2 or 2.0, and the adsorbed sera were then tested for ablastic activity in vitro. With both cell/serum ratios, ablastic activity was reduced by 50%. In comparison, similar adsorptions of immune sera with trypanosomes from immunocompetent hosts resulted in reductions of ablastic activity of only about 9 and 27% with the low and high cell/serum ratios, respectively. It is concluded that the failure to effect significant adsorption of ablastin in earlier studies resulted from the use of ablastinsensitized trypanosomes from immunocompetent hosts.
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