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. 1959 Oct;2(4):322–333.

The Conglutination Phenomenon

XIII. In vivo Interactions of Conglutinin and Experimental Bacterial Infection

D G Ingram
PMCID: PMC1423967  PMID: 13852849

Abstract

Some interrelations between the conglutinating activity of the serum of an animal and experimental bacterial infection were investigated. The passive transfer of conglutinating activity was demonstrated. The level of this activity reaches a peak within 2 days after subcutaneous injection, then declines until no significant titres are demonstrable in 12 to 14 days. It is shown that infection of animals with Salmonella typhimurium causes a rapid reduction in the conglutinating activity of the serum immediately after challenge. Evidence is presented which indicates that the previous injection of conglutinin preparations enhances bactericidal activity of the mouse against Salm. typhimurium.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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