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Research Article

Nonimmune binding of human immunoglobulin A to type II group B streptococci.

B F Anthony, N F Concepcion, S M Puentes, N R Payne
B F Anthony
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N F Concepcion
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S M Puentes
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N R Payne
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ABSTRACT

The binding of 125I-labeled human myeloma immunoglobulin A (IgA) to four type II strains and one nontypable strain of group B streptococci was measured after streptococcal chains were broken by brief sonication. Some IgA binding was observed with all strains, but specific binding (binding that was inhibited by excess unlabeled IgA, was dose dependent, and was saturable) occurred only with those strains possessing the trypsin-sensitive beta component of the c protein. Similar amounts of binding were observed with myeloma IgA and IgA1 purified from normal serum. Specific binding was more rapid at 25 degrees C than at 0 or 37 degrees C and reached a plateau in 6 to 8 h. Binding was drastically reduced (85 to 90%) when streptococci had been heated (90 degrees C for 1 h). Most radioactivity bound to group B streptococci could be displaced (greater than 60% in 3 days) by the addition of excess unlabeled IgA. The binding capacity of one strain (10(8) streptococci in 1 ml of buffer) was saturated by approximately 24 micrograms of IgA. When transformed for Scatchard analysis, these data indicated that there was a specific binding capacity of 16,000 molecules of monomeric serum IgA per single streptococcal cell. The dissociation constant for IgA binding was 19.3 nM. Since enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay studies showed that the myeloma IgA used for the studies described above was IgA1, our quantitative data apply only to the binding of this subclass to group B streptococci. However, an enzyme-linked immunosorbent-filtration assay showed that both IgA1 and IgA2 bound to a type II group B streptococcus bearing the c protein.

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Nonimmune binding of human immunoglobulin A to type II group B streptococci.
B F Anthony, N F Concepcion, S M Puentes, N R Payne
Infection and Immunity Jun 1990, 58 (6) 1789-1795; DOI:

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Nonimmune binding of human immunoglobulin A to type II group B streptococci.
B F Anthony, N F Concepcion, S M Puentes, N R Payne
Infection and Immunity Jun 1990, 58 (6) 1789-1795; DOI:
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