1. Clinical and immunologic significance of cholera-like toxin and cytotoxin production by Campylobacter species in patients with acute inflammatory diarrhea in the USA.
- Author
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Perez-Perez GI, Cohn DL, Guerrant RL, Patton CM, Reller LB, and Blaser MJ
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Antibody Formation, Antigens, Surface analysis, Campylobacter immunology, Diarrhea immunology, Enterotoxins analysis, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Humans, Inflammation, United States, Campylobacter pathogenicity, Campylobacter Infections immunology, Cholera Toxin, Cytotoxins biosynthesis, Diarrhea microbiology
- Abstract
The humoral immune response to both Campylobacter jejuni cell surface antigens and to potential toxins of the organism was studied in 64 adults with inflammatory diarrhea. In an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for surface antigens, 17 (71%) of 24 persons with Campylobacter enteritis showed seroconversion in more than one immunoglobulin class, versus only 2 (5%) of 40 patients with non-Campylobacter enteritis. In a GM1, ganglioside-based ELISA for detecting serum IgG to cholera-like enterotoxin, only one patient studied showed seroconversion to the enterotoxin. Of 22 Campylobacter isolates studied for production of cholera-like toxin, none of the supernatants from the Campylobacter strains were positive. Supernatants were also tested for enterotoxin and cytotoxic activity on Chinese hamster ovary cells; all isolates were negative for enterotoxin activity. In contrast, cytotoxin was produced by 7 (32%) isolates but was usually low-level and was not neutralized by patient's serum. These findings indicate that production of cholera-like toxin and cytotoxin by Campylobacter strains in the United States occurs in few strains and that host immune response is absent; their biologic significance in the pathogenesis of Campylobacter infections remains unclear.
- Published
- 1989
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