RESUMO
Sera from patients with lateral amyotrophic sclerosis (LAS) were discovered to produce a cytotoxic effect one hour after their intracerebral administration to experimental animals. Coons' test using serum against human gammaglobulins was used to detect their selective binding to separate cells of nervous tissue culture. The data obtained point out that LAS patients' serum contains different anticerebral antibodies whose presence may account for the cytotoxic effect of these sera on the ultrastructure of experimental animals' nervous tissue.
Assuntos
Esclerose Lateral Amiotrófica/imunologia , Edema Encefálico/etiologia , Encéfalo/imunologia , Citotoxicidade Imunológica , Soros Imunes/imunologia , Imunização , Animais , Meios de Cultura , Humanos , Técnicas In Vitro , Coelhos , RatosRESUMO
Electron microscopy of normal rabbit brain, conducted after the animals had been given intracerebral injection of serum obtained from patients with hepatocerebral dystrophy revealed some peculiarities of the damaging effect of such serum on the brain. Incubation of neural tissue culture with such serum resulted in appearance of hypertrophic astrocytes, type II Alzheimer's cells and Opalski's cells combined with the intact synthesis of an astrocyte specific antigen--an acid protein of astrocytic fibrility--detected by Coons' immunofluorescent test.