The Journal of Experimental Medicine
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The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Vol 107, 1-12, Copyright, 1958, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York


ARTICLE

SURFACE PHAGOCYTOSIS : FURTHER EVIDENCE OF ITS DESTRUCTIVE ACTION UPON FULLY ENCAPSULATED PNEUMOCOCCI IN THE ABSENCE OF TYPE-SPECIFIC ANTIBODY



Mary Ruth Smith 1 and W. Barry Wood Jr. M.D.1

1 From the Department of Microbiology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and School of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore

Experiments recently reported (18) have been interpreted to indicate that surface phagocytosis plays no significant part in natural antipneumococcal defense. A repetition of these experiments has revealed: (a) that the cellular content of the leucocytic suspensions used in the phagocytic tests was of a different order of magnitude from that of the exudates which usually exist in infected tissues, (b) that the suspensions were too dilute to allow surface phagocytosis of pneumococci to occur, and (c) that the ratio of bacteria to leucocytes. was such that, when a sufficiently concentrated exudate was employed, the pneumococci injured the leucocytes and thus prevented phagocytosis from taking place.

When conditions of the tests were suitably controlled, and conventional quantitative methods were employed to measure the end results of the phagocytic reaction, the essential observations relating to surface phagocytosis were fully confirmed. The significance of this non-antibody mechanism of defense in pneumococcal infections was thus further substantiated.

Submitted on June 29, 1957


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