» Articles » PMID: 13096660

Studies of the Effect Bacterial Endotoxins on Rabbit Leucocytes. II. Development of Acquired Resistance

Overview
Journal J Exp Med
Date 1953 Oct 1
PMID 13096660
Citations 18
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Bacterial endotoxin injected intravenously into rabbits inhibited the migration of leucocytes from the buffy coat of centrifuged blood (4). Repeated daily injections of endotoxin resulted in the rabbits becoming resistant to the fever-inducing action of the toxin, and migration of leucocytes from centrifuged blood was no longer inhibited by injection of the toxin. Leucocyte migration from the buffy coat of centrifuged blood after injection of toxin into the rabbits appeared gradually over the first few days of repeated injections, and disappeared during the 10 to 15 days after cessation of daily injections of toxin. The resistance to endotoxin, demonstrated by leucocyte migration and pyrogen tolerance, could not be passively transferred with serum from resistant animals, and was non-specific, in that resistance to one endotoxin conferred some resistance to toxin from an organism of a different species. No relationship could be demonstrated between precipitin titer and resistance. Thorotrast abolished resistance to the fever-inducing activity of endotoxin, but its effect on leucocyte resistance was not clear, since when injected alone it inhibited migration of leucocytes from the buffy coat of centrifuged blood. The suggestion is made that the failure of toxin to inhibit the migration of leucocytes from resistant rabbits is due either to the presence of leucocytes which have become adapted to the toxin by repeated exposure, or to rapid removal of the toxin by the reticulo-endothelial system. It is unlikely that leucocyte resistance participates in the development of tolerance to the fever-inducing action of endotoxin. However, in view of the participation of the leucocyte in the pathogenesis of the Shwartzman reaction, the presence of leucocytes resistant to endotoxin may be responsible in part for the development of resistance to the Shwartzman phenomenon.

Citing Articles

Vascular Effects of Endotoxins.

Stetson C Bull N Y Acad Med. 2009; 37(7):486-92.

PMID: 19312679 PMC: 1804688.


[Experimental animal studies on the iodine reaction of leukocytes. Part I. Iodophilia of leukocytes under the effect of bacterial pyrogens from gramnegative microorganisms].

KEIDERLING W, Schmidt H Klin Wochenschr. 1960; 38:168-74.

PMID: 14405160 DOI: 10.1007/BF01481235.


Studies with radioactive endotoxin. II. Correlation of physiologic effects with distribution of radioactivity in rabbits injected with radioactive sodium chromate.

BRAUDE A, Carey F, Zalesky M J Clin Invest. 1955; 34(6):858-66.

PMID: 14381515 PMC: 1072616. DOI: 10.1172/JCI103141.


Studies on the pathogenesis of fever. I. The presence of transferable pyrogen in the blood stream following the injection of typhoid vaccine.

Atkins E, WOOD Jr W J Exp Med. 1955; 101(5):519-28.

PMID: 14367676 PMC: 2136461. DOI: 10.1084/jem.101.5.519.


QUANTITATIVE STUDIES OF FEBRILE TOLERANCE AND LEVELS OF SPECIFIC ANTIBODY EVOKED BY BACTERIAL ENDOTOXIN.

MULHOLLAND J, Wolff S, Jackson A, Landy M J Clin Invest. 1965; 44:920-8.

PMID: 14322026 PMC: 292572. DOI: 10.1172/JCI105209.


References
1.
CREECH H, HANKWITZ Jr R, WHARTON D . Further studies of the immunological properties of polysaccharides from Serratia marcescens (Bacillus prodigiosus) the effects of passive and active immunization on the lethal activity of the polysaccharides. Cancer Res. 1949; 9(3):150-7. View

2.
Cluff L, BENNET Jr I . Acquired resistance to the Shwartzman phenomenon. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med. 1951; 77(3):461-4. DOI: 10.3181/00379727-77-18814. View

3.
Beeson P . TOLERANCE TO BACTERIAL PYROGENS : I. FACTORS INFLUENCING ITS DEVELOPMENT. J Exp Med. 2009; 86(1):29-38. PMC: 2135744. DOI: 10.1084/jem.86.1.29. View

4.
STETSON Jr C . Studies on the mechanism of the Shwartzman phenomenon; certain factors involved in the production of the local hemorrhagic necrosis. J Exp Med. 1951; 93(5):489-504. PMC: 2136038. DOI: 10.1084/jem.93.5.489. View

5.
CREECH H, Hamilton M . The influence of antibody-containing fractions on the lethal and tumor-necrotizing actions of polysaccharides from Serratia marcescens (Bacillus prodigiosus). Cancer Res. 1948; 8(7):330-6. View