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jem Home » 1941 Archive » 1 February » 73 (2): 173
Article

THE OCCURRENCE DURING ACUTE INFECTIONS OF A PROTEIN NOT NORMALLY PRESENT IN THE BLOOD

Theodore J. Abernethy, Oswald T. Avery
Theodore J. Abernethy
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Oswald T. Avery
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DOI: 10.1084/jem.73.2.173 | Published February 1, 1941
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Abstract

The serum obtained from human beings and monkeys during the acute phase of diverse infections contains a protein which is precipitable by the C polysaccharide of pneumococcus. The distribution of this protein in acute phase serum has been studied, and the effect of calcium on the precipitation reaction with the C polysaccharide is described. Other distinctive features of this reaction are discussed.

1. When heated above 65°C., serum obtained from patients during certain acute infections loses the property of reacting in precipitation tests with the C polysaccharide of pneumococcus. The loss of activity under these conditions occurs at temperatures known to denature many proteins.

2. The reactive component in "acute phase" serum which precipitates with the C polysaccharide is tentatively regarded as a protein.

3. The reactive substance is associated with the albumin fraction of serum.

4. In the reaction between patients' serum and C polysaccharide, flocculation is conditioned by the presence of calcium ions.

5. The following distinctive features of the C-reaction are discussed with reference to known characteristics of antigen-antibody phenomena: (a) the occurrence of the reactive component in blood only during the acute stage of the infection; (b) the lack of specificity of the reaction with respect to the inciting cause of the disease; (c) the presence of the active substance in the albumin fraction of the serum; (d) the action of calcium in producing flocculation.

Footnotes

    • Submitted: 6 October 1940
© 1941 Rockefeller University Press
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THE OCCURRENCE DURING ACUTE INFECTIONS OF A PROTEIN NOT NORMALLY PRESENT IN THE BLOOD
Theodore J. Abernethy, Oswald T. Avery
Journal of Experimental Medicine Feb 1941, 73 (2) 173-182; DOI: 10.1084/jem.73.2.173

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The Journal of Experimental Medicine: 216 (2)

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February 4, 2019
Volume 216, No. 2

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Print ISSN: 0022-1007

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