| Literature DB >> 13651580 |
D A BROWN, B N PRICHARD, J P QUILLIAM.
Abstract
The alpha-toxin of Staphylococcus pyogenes produced a slowly developing contracture of isolated preparations of rabbit jejunum and of guinea-pig ileum which persisted after thorough washing and left the gut unresponsive to further doses of alpha-toxin or of acetylcholine. After incubation with antitoxin, the alpha-toxin no longer produced a contracture. Antitoxin only prevented the alpha-toxin response if added to the bath fluid before but not after the alpha-toxin. Certain drugs reduced the alpha-toxin contracture when added to the bath fluid before or after the alpha-toxin, but the contracture reappeared on washing. Papaverine abolished the contracture and pethidine was only slightly less active. Mepyramine, amyl nitrite, caffeine, aminophylline, adrenaline and ephedrine partly reduced the contracture. Hexamethonium, cocaine, tubocurarine and gallamine had no effect. The effect of atropine was only small. The gut-stimulant activity/haemolytic unit of two alpha-toxin samples differed greatly; this difference did not appear to be due to activity of impurities. The implications of these observations are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: MICROCOCCUS PYOGENES
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1959 PMID: 13651580 PMCID: PMC1481836 DOI: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1959.tb00929.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Pharmacol Chemother ISSN: 0366-0826