| Literature DB >> 6020560 |
Abstract
A technique for identifying and characterizing staphylococcal hemolysins by first separating them electrophoretically in barbital-buffered agar gel (pH 8.4) at 5 ma/cm for 2 hr and then determining their hemolytic activities by exposing them to human, horse, rabbit, and sheep erythrocytes is described. The alpha-hemolysin produced by a White variant of the Wood 46 strain of Staphylococcus aureus migrated 18 mm towards the cathode, and it lysed horse, rabbit, and sheep erythrocytes, whereas a Clear variant of the Wood 46 strain of S. aureus produced a lysin which migrated similarly to the alpha-hemolysin but lysed only rabbit cells. This latter lysin was tentatively named alpha(1)-lysin. This strain of S. aureus also produced beta-hemolysin which migrated 36 mm towards the cathode and lysed sheep cells. beta-Hemolysin produced by some strains of S. aureus showed considerable tailing during electrophoresis, whereas beta-hemolysin produced by other strains of S. aureus migrated as a well-defined peak. A lysin migrating 11 mm towards the anode was probably delta-lysin. It was, however, not produced in sufficient concentration when the cultures were grown in semisolid medium.Entities:
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Year: 1967 PMID: 6020560 PMCID: PMC276471 DOI: 10.1128/jb.93.2.525-530.1967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bacteriol ISSN: 0021-9193 Impact factor: 3.490