The formation of precipitates on mixing anti-horse sera

1. Five anto-horse sera which did not contain antibodies for horse-serum crystalbumin have been shown by absorption experiments to contain horse-serum crystalbumin. 2. All five sera precipitated when mixes with other anti-horse sera containing anti-crystalbumin, precipitation being due to the presence of horse-serum crystalbumin in one antiserum and of anti-crystalbumin in the other. 3. Antigen and its homologous antibody were never found together in the serum of an animal, and contradictory results in other experiments are probably due to impure multiple antigens. 4. It is concluded that anti-horse sera may contain some of the antigenic components of injected horse serum together with antibodies to other antigens of the horse serum, but not homologous antigen and antibody. Consequently, the ‘mutual’ precipitation of anti-horse sera is due to the presence of a number of antigens in horse serum, one or more of which, present in one anti-horse serum, in the absence of its homologous antibody, may precipitate when mixed with another anti-horse serum which contains the homologous antibody. 5. The use in these experiments of a single α-procedure optimum as the indicator of an antigen-antibody reaction illustrates a method enabling the investigation of problems involving single antigen-antibody reactions, even though the available reagents consist of mistures of antigens and mixtures of antibodies.

[1]  G. Naylor Some observations on the reaction between horse serum and a pool of rabbit antihorse serum. II. An analysis of the antigens concerned in the production of multiple zones , 1949, Epidemiology and Infection.

[2]  C. Cohn,et al.  Studies in serum proteins , 1948 .

[3]  G. Naylor Some observations on the reaction between horse serum and a pool of rabbit antihorse serum: I. The relative inhibitory effect of excess antigen and excess antiserum , 1948, Journal of Hygiene.

[4]  J. Miles,et al.  The Specificity of Serological Reactions , 1945, Nature.

[5]  A. M. Pappenheimer ANTI-EGG ALBUMIN ANTIBODY IN THE HORSE , 1940, Journal of Experimental Medicine.

[6]  M. Heidelberger QUANTITATIVE ABSOLUTE METHODS IN THE STUDY OF ANTIGEN-ANTIBODY REACTIONS , 1939, Bacteriological reviews.

[7]  L. Hewitt Preparation and properties of a globulin present in the albumin fraction of serum. , 1938, The Biochemical journal.

[8]  F. E. Kendall,et al.  STUDIES ON SERUM PROTEINS. I. IDENTIFICATION OF A SINGLE SERUM GLOBULIN BY IMMUNOLOGICAL MEANS. ITS DISTRIBUTION IN THE SERA OF NORMAL INDIVIDUALS AND OF PATIENTS WITH CIRRHOSIS OF THE LIVER AND WITH CHRONIC GLOMERULONEPHRITIS. , 1937, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[9]  G. L. Taylor The Demonstration of the Increase of Globulin in Diphtheria Antitoxins by the Precipitation Reaction , 1935, Journal of Hygiene.

[10]  J. Culbertson The Rôle of the Precipitin Antibody in the Removal of Intravenously Injected Antigen , 1935, The Journal of Immunology.

[11]  N. E. Goldsworthy,et al.  Complexity of antigens in relation to zones in the precipitation reaction , 1935 .

[12]  G. L. Taylor,et al.  The Precipitation Reaction: Optimal Proportions, Neutrality and Maximal Precipitation in Mixtures of Albumin and Antiserum , 1934, Journal of Hygiene.

[13]  W. Boyd,et al.  The Existence of Antigenic Determinants of Diverse Specificity in a Single Protein , 1933, The Journal of Immunology.

[14]  J. T. Duncan The Use of Equivalent Proportions of Antigen and Serum in Absorption of Precipitin , 1932 .

[15]  C. Dragstedt,et al.  STUDIES IN ANAPHYLAXIS , 1932 .

[16]  G. L. Taylor,et al.  The Estimation of Proteins by the Precipitation Reaction , 1932, Journal of Hygiene.

[17]  N. E. Goldsworthy The Occurrence of Multiple Zones in the Serum Precipitation Reaction. , 1928 .

[18]  R. A. Webb,et al.  The determination of the rate of antibody (precipitin) production in rabbit's blood by the method of “optimal proportions” , 1928 .

[19]  R. A. Webb,et al.  The influence of optimal proportions of antigen and antibody in the serum precipitation reaction , 1926 .

[20]  L. Hektoen,et al.  Precipitin reactions of serum proteins , 1924 .

[21]  Barbara B. Hopkins Duration of Passive Immunity Part IV , 1923, Journal of Hygiene.

[22]  A. Glenny,et al.  Duration of Passive Immunity. Part III , 1923, Journal of Hygiene.

[23]  E. Opie The Relation of Antigen to Antibody (Precipitin) in the Circulating Blood , 1923, The Journal of Immunology.

[24]  E. Opie The Relation of Antigen to Antibody (Precipitin) in Vitro , 1923 .

[25]  A. Glenny,et al.  Duration of Passive Immunity , 1922, Journal of Hygiene.

[26]  S. Bayne-Jones EQUILIBRIA IN PRECIPITIN REACTIONS : THE COEXISTENCE OF A SINGLE FREE ANTIGEN AND ITS ANTIBODY IN THE SAME SERUM. , 1917 .

[27]  S. Bayne-Jones EQUILIBRIA IN PRECIPITIN REACTIONS , 1917, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[28]  R. Weil Studies in Anaphylaxis XV. Equilibrium in Precipitation Reactions. Equilibrium in Combination , 1916 .

[29]  H. Zinsser,et al.  Infection and resistance , 1914 .

[30]  R. Weil Studies in Anaphylaxis. , 1916, The Journal of medical research.

[31]  H. Zinsser,et al.  ON THE POSSIBLE IMPORTANCE OF COLLOIDAL PROTECTION IN CERTAIN PHASES OF THE PRECIPITIN REACTION , 1913, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[32]  The Constitution of Soluble Proteins , 2022, Nature.