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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1971 June; 21(6): 1017-1023
Copyright © 1971 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Preparation and Standardization of an Australia Antigen Antibody of Equine Origin

V. J. Cabasso, R. Nieman, D. D. Schroeder, K. A. Hok, R. E. Louie and M. M. Mozen

Microbiological and Biochemical Research Departments, Cutter Laboratories, Berkeley, California 94710

ABSTRACT

A horse has been immunized with Australia antigen (Au/SH) purified 20-fold by a procedure employing gel filtration of Cohn fraction IV derived from an Au/SH-positive human plasma pool. Hyperimmunization was initiated by the intramuscular injection of 20 ml of a mixture of equal parts of purified Au/SH and complete Freund's adjuvant. The 20-ml volume was divided into four 5-ml doses, two of which were administered on each side of the horse's neck. Booster doses of antigen alone were given as follows: 10 ml intravenously 30 days later and 5 ml intramuscularly on each of days 77 and 205. Au/SH antibody formed readily, beginning on day 17, and was demonstrated by the agar gel double-diffusion technique and the complement fixation test during the subsequent 6 months. Antihuman plasma protein antibodies were effectively removed from the horse serum by one absorption with 1 to 3 volumes of normal human plasma. Abrupt rises in anticomplementary activity observed shortly after the third and fourth antigen injections, when the horse had developed elevated and steady levels of Au/SH antibody, could possibly be due to formation of antigen-antibody complexes. After optimal conditions were determined, an Au/SH antibody reagent pool which met official requirements was prepared. It was found equally suitable for the agar gel double-diffusion, complement fixation, and counterimmunoelectrophoresis test procedures.


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1971 June; 21(6): 1017-1023
Copyright © 1971 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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