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On the Haemolytic Immune Isolysins of the Ox and their Relation to the Question of Individuality and Blood-relationship

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

Charles Todd
Affiliation:
Bacteriologist, Egyptian Government.
R. G. White
Affiliation:
Director, Serum Institute, Cairo.
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The term “Isolysin” was first employed by Ehrlich and Morgenroth in the third of their now classical series of papers entitled “Studies on Haemolysis(1).” It had been shown by Bordet that if the red blood corpuscles of an animal A are injected into another animal B, of a different species, the serum of B develops a haemolysin for the corpuscles of A. This haemolysin being produced in a different species of animal from that yielding the corpuscles, is termed, according to Ehrlich's nomenclature, a heterolysin.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1910

References

REFERENCES

(1)Ehrlich, and Morgenroth, . Studies on Haemolysis. Third Communication. Collected Studies on Immunity. New York, p. 23.Google Scholar
(2)Frei, . Haemolysis in Practical Veterinary Science. The Veterinary Bacteriological Laboratories. Pretoria, 1909, p. 68.Google Scholar
(3)Ehrlich., The receptor apparatus of the red blood–cells. loc. cit. p. 390.Google Scholar
(4)Dungern, v. and Hirschfeld, . Ueber Nachweis und Vererbung biochemischer Strukturen. Zeitschr. f. Immunitätsforschung, IV. p. 531.Google Scholar