Publication | Open Access
Human peripheral blood lymphocyte activation by protein A from Staphylococcus aureus
18
Citations
21
References
1982
Year
Microbial PathogensHumoral ResponseImmunologyBacteriologyStaphylococcus AureusAntigen ProcessingCell ProliferationBacterial PathogensHost ResponseMedical MicrobiologyBinding SiteInfection ControlHealth SciencesVirulence FactorAutoimmunityClinical MicrobiologyPathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicineS. Aureus
Mitogenesis and polyclonal immunoglobulin production in peripheral blood lymphocyte cultures activated with Formalin-fixed or autoclaved protein A-containing Staphylococcus aureus were studied. Direct evidence for a dissociation between cell proliferation and polyclonal immunoglobulin production was found, in that S. aureus was not mitogenic after being autoclaved but retained the ability to stimulate B cells to produce immunoglobulin. Trypsin-treated S. aureus lost its binding site for immunoglobulin G, but its mitogenicity was not altered; thus, the protein A binding site for immunoglobulin G on the bacterial cell wall is not required for the stimulation of lymphocyte proliferation. Our data also show a dissociation between cell proliferation and polyclonal immunoglobulin production induced by protein A coupled to Sepharose CL-4B. These results suggest the presence of three distinct active sites on the protein A molecule: one that binds immunoglobulin G molecules, one that stimulates cell proliferation, and one that stimulates polyclonal immunoglobulin production.
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