Neutralization of human serum lysozyme by sodium polyanethol sulfonate but not by sodium amylosulfate. |
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Authors: | W H Traub and P I Fukushima |
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Abstract: | Sodium polyanethol sulfonate (SPS) at 500 microgram/ml, but not sodium amylosulfate (SAS) at 500 microgram/ml, precipitated egg white lysozyme (1 mg and 50 microgram of lysozyme per ml) as determined with the assay strain Micrococcus lysodeikticus ATCC 4698. Fresh and heat-inactivated (56 degrees C, 30 min) human serum (80%, vol/vol) killed M. lysodeikticus (10(4) bacteria per ml at zero time) within 1 to 2 h after exposure. Addition of 250 to 500 microgram of SPS per ml to fresh human serum protected M. lysodeikticus for 22 h as effectively as absorption of either fresh or heat-inactivated human serum with bentonite (10 mg/ml of serum, 10 min, 37 degrees C); the latter procedure is known to remove serum lysozyme. In contrast, SAS at 250 and 500 microgram/ml of serum retarded killing of the assay bacteria for periods of 4 h; after overnight (22 h) incubation, however, the number of M. lysodeikticus survivors had decreased significantly. The finding that SPS, but not SAS, at 250 to 500 microgram/ml effectively neutralized serum lysozyme-mediated killing of a lysozyme-sensitive assay strain may be of relevance with respect to laboratory processing of human blood culture specimens. |
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