Publication | Open Access
The Role of Immunoglobulin in the Neutralization of Trachoma Infectivity
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1974
Year
Primary ImmunodeficiencyImmunoglobulin FractionOphthalmologyImmunodeficienciesPathogenesisImmunologyImmunodominanceAutoimmunityTrachoma InfectivityActive TrachomaImmunoglobulin EOcular PathologyImmunologic DiseaseAqueous HumourMedicineParasitologyEye Secretions
Abstract Eye secretions and plasma from children with active trachoma have been shown to neutralize trachoma organisms. Various preparations of eye secretions were incubated with trachoma organisms and then assayed for infectivity by ocular infection in owl monkeys. Eye secretions with anti-trachoma antibody or immunoglobulin isolated from these eye secretions neutralized infective organisms. Negative controls (eye secretions with the immunoglobulin removed, normal eye secretions, or buffer) did not neutralize trachoma organisms. We conclude that the immunoglobulin fraction is responsible for this neutralization and that the neutralization is type-specific.