Abstract
Exoantigens are produced by Trypanosoma lewisi during infections in the rat. They were detected in rat serum and plasma by gel-diffusion techniques with hyperimmune rat sera and with rabbit antiserum to washed, living trypanosomes. Their parasite origin is indicated by their presence in trypanosome homogenates, which also contain bound antigens, the continued reactivity of rabbit antisera after absorption with normal rat serum, and the reactions of identity obtained with rat and rabbit antisera. Moreover, by immunoelectrophoresis, the exontigens are revealed as new components in infected rat serum with a mobility slightly anodal to the origin. The results also show that the exoantigens are continuously released in vivo and that the trypanosomes avidly bind non-antibody rat serum proteins to their surface. Unlike the complete qualitative changes in exoantigens that accompany antigenic variation of pathogenic species of trypanosomes, at least one exoantigen remains unchanged when antigenic variation occurs with T. lewisi although additional exoantigens may appear and disappear. The relation of the exoantigens to the known ablastic and trypanocidal antibodies is difficult to determine since these antibodies and the exoantigens occur simultaneously in the blood during and after the infection. Although it cannot yet be ruled out that the exoantigens elicit the formation of these antibodies, a review of all the available evidence suggests that the exoantigens of T. lewisi may not be immunogenic during a natural course of infection. Possibly they are hemolysins with a nutritive function.
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