Antigens of virulent and attenuated Rickettsia tsutsugamushi.

1986 
We studied the antigens present in L929 mouse fibroblast or rabbit testicular cells, which had been infected or not with a prototype strain of Rickettsia tsutsugamushi, the causal agent of scrub typhus, and its attenuated variant. Immunoblotting revealed four antigens, designated 1, 1a, 2 and 3, which appeared to be specifically associated with infection with this organism. Antigens 1 and 1a had similar mol. wt of about 60 kD and antigen 2 and 3 had mol. wts of 45 kD and 28 kD respectively. Whereas antigen 1a, 2 and 3 were common to infection with either the virulent or the attenuated strains of the organism, antigen 1 was only detected in cells infected with the virulent strain and was reactive only with the antiserum raised against cells infected with that strain. In addition, two antigens were also detected by crossed immunoelectrophoresis, one of which was similarly associated with infection with the virulent strain as antigen 1, while the other was common to infection with either of the strains. It seems that the antigenic cross reaction between the two strains may account, in part at least, for the protection of mice against infection with the virulent strain afforded by the attenuated strain, while the loss or modification of antigen 1 might be associated with attenuation of the organism with respect to its virulence to mice.
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