The Journal of Experimental Medicine
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The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Vol 55, 441-444, Copyright, 1932, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York


ARTICLE

PROPERTIES OF THE CAUSATIVE AGENT OF A CHICKEN TUMOR : II. THE INACTIVATION OF THE TUMOR-PRODUCING AGENT BY MONOCHROMATIC ULTRA-VIOLET LIGHT



Ernest Sturm 1, Frederick L. Gates M.D.1, and James B. Murphy M.D.1

1 From the Laboratories of The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research

Even though part of the energy of the incident light is probably absorbed by chemical entities which play no part in the specific reaction of inactivation, nevertheless the wave lengths most active in destroying biological cells or agents will presumably be found to be among those absorbed in the highest proportion. This would indicate that the curves here presented are approximately reciprocal to the coefficients of absorption of particular substances, the destruction of which caused the inactivation of the agents or the death of the cells. The similarity between the curves for bacteria, virus, and phage, both in shape and in total involved energies, suggests the presence of a common factor, or of closely related chemical entities, sensitive to ultra-violet light, whereas the data for the tumor agent suggest that its inactivation is due to the destruction of a substance having an essentially different spectral absorption, and therefore of a different chemical character. While the amount of ultra-violet energy required to affect the tumor agent is great, it is still less than that involved in the inactivation of some of the enzymes (7).

A study is under way to compare the deduced spectral analysis with the actual coefficients of absorption of the highly purified tumor agent.

Submitted on December 9, 1931


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