The surface of virulent Treponema pallidum: resistance to antibody binding in the absence of complement and surface association of recombinant antigen 4D.

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The binding of immunoglobulin G present in syphilitic immune rabbit serum, syphilitic human serum, and rabbit antiserum to purified recombinant Treponema pallidum antigen 4D by T. pallidum, Nichols strain, was studied by immunoelectron microscopy. Treponemes were incubated with antiserum under the conditions of the T. pallidum immobilization test, in which T. pallidum-specific antibody renders the organism nonmotile and avirulent only in the presence of complement after a 16-h incubation period in an anaerobic environment. Antibody was not demonstrable on the surface of T. pallidum incubated with nonimmune rabbit serum or normal human serum in the presence of complement. Similarly, in the absence of complement, little or no antibody was found on the treponemal surface after incubation with syphilitic immune rabbit serum, syphilitic human serum, or rabbit antiserum directed against the recombinant 4D antigen. The addition of complement to syphilitic immune rabbit serum, syphilitic human serum, and anti-4D antibody resulted in immobilization and the deposition of antibody on the entire surface of the immobilized organisms. These results corroborate earlier work by other investigators demonstrating the resistance of freshly isolated T. pallidum to antibody binding in a variety of serological tests. Detection of 4D antigen on the surface of immobilized T. pallidum strongly implies that the use of T. pallidum immobilization test conditions provides a means to demonstrate the association of individual surface antigens on virulent T. pallidum. The resistance of T. pallidum to antibody binding may be relevant to the pathogenesis of syphilis.

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