@article{18142, keywords = {Adult, Amyloid, Amyloidosis, Antibodies, Bacterial, Antibody Specificity, Ethiopia, Humans, Immunodiffusion, Immunoelectrophoresis, Immunoglobulin M, leprosy, Mycobacterium, Mycobacterium leprae, Norway, Plants, Toxic, Ricinus, T-Lymphocytes}, author = {Kronvall G and Husby G and Samuel D and Bjune G and Wheate H}, title = {Amyloid-related serum component (protein ASC) IN LEPROSY PATIENTS.}, abstract = {
The presence of amyloid-related serum component, protein ASC, in serum samples from 63 leprosy patients was investigated. Protein ASC was detected in 38% of the patients. A correlation to the disease spectrum of leprosy was apparent: polar lepromatous cases, 64% positive; borderline lepromatous, 50%; borderline tuberculoid, 36%; subpolar tuberculoid, 17%; and polar tuberculoid, negative. Antibody activity against the a antigen of Mycobacterium leprae was also determined, showing a similar correlation to the disease spectrum. Serum samples from 23 apparently healthy Ethiopians serving as controls showed a protein ASC incidence of 22%. This figure is significantly higher than the frequency found by others among healthy Norwegian blood donors. Immunoglobulin M levels among patients were elevated in the borderline lepromatous and poplar lepromatous groups. The three tuberculoid groups did not differ in this respect from the control group but were all elevated as compared to a normal Caucasian serum pool. Although raised immunoglobulin M levels seemed to parallel increased frequencies of protein ASC in the patient groups as well as in controls, this correlation might be only secondary to a primary derangement in T-cell function.
}, year = {1975}, journal = {Infection and immunity}, volume = {11}, pages = {969-72}, month = {1975 May}, issn = {0019-9567}, language = {eng}, }