The Journal of Experimental Medicine
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The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Vol 49, 919-935, Copyright, 1929, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York


ARTICLE

IMMUNOLOGIC REACTIONS WITH TOBACCO MOSAIC VIRUS

Helen A. Purdy 1

1 From the Department of Bacteriology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, and the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, Inc., Yonkers.

1. Antisera were produced, separately, in rabbits to normal sap from healthy Turkish tobacco plants and to irus-sap from tobacco plants, affected with mosaic disease.

2. The immunologic reactions of the antisera were studied by means of:

(a) Alexin-fixation tests.

(b) Precipitation experiments, including: Precipitin-absorption tests with the same tobacco virus multiplied in tobacco, tomato, pepper, and petunia plants.

(c) Experiments with the inactivation properties of both antisera and normal serum on virus-sap.

3. From the results obtained from the above experiments, the following conclusions were drawn:

(a) Normal-tobacco-sap and virus-tobacco-sap possess antigenic substances in common.

(b) Normal sap and virus-sap of tomato, pepper, and petunia plants contain antigenic substances in common with normal sap of tobacco.

(c) Virus-saps of tomato, pepper, and petunia plants, have antigenic substances in common with virus-sap of tobacco, that are either not present in the normal tobacco sap or present only in small amounts.

(d) The two antisera possess alexin-fixing antibodies and precipitins in common.

(e) All of the precipitins to normal tobacco sap may be removed from either antiserum by absorption with virus-sap of tobacco.

(f) Specific precipitins for virus-sap of tobacco, tomato, pepper, and petunia are present in the antiserum to tobacco virus-sap and cannot be removed by complete absorption with normal sap of tobacco.

(g) Antiserum to virus-sap of tobacco, when used in an appropriate amount, has the power of completely inactivating virus-sap.

A corresponding quantity of antiserum to normal tobacco sap, or normal rabbit or guinea-pig serum, does not exhibit the same preventive action on virus-sap.

(h) There is some evidence that a specific antibody to virus-sap, lytic in nature, is present in the homologous antiserum.

Submitted on February 24, 1929


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