Cell-mediated immune response following Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection in man. I. Lymphocyte stimulation.

  • 1 May 1974
    • journal article
    • Vol. 17 (1), 29-41
Abstract
Lymphocytes from seventeen cases of recent Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection, thirteen cases of previous infection and ten healthy subjects lacking antibodies to M. pneumoniae were cultured in the presence of various antigen preparations of M. pneumoniae. Lymphocyte stimulation was measured by the uptake of [14C]thymidine and by counting of morphologically transformed cells. The lymphocyte response to a sonicated concentrate of M. pneumoniae organisms and to a membrane fraction was significantly higher in recently infected patients than in healthy controls. However, nine out of ten serologically negative controls showed some degree of lymphocyte reactivity to M. pneumoniae. A lipid fraction of M. pneumoniae, which had a high antigen titre in the complement fixation test, induced no appreciable stimulation of lymphocytes from infected cases or control subjects.