Morphological destruction of cultured cells by the attachment of Treponema pallidum

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Abstract

The incubation of Treponema pallidum with rabbit testicular cells, HEP-2 cells, human foreskin cells, rat cardiac cells, and rat skeletal muscle cells caused morphological disruption of these cultured cells. Control preparations of heat-inactivated treponemes, a highspeed supernatant in which treponemes had been pelleted, and culture medium failed to damage the tissue cells, as did viable treponemes when the cells were incubated in inverted Sykes-Moore chambers. Thus, cellular disruption is not associated with soluble treponemal, soluble inflammatory, or soluble testicular constituents but is mediated by the specific attachment of T pallidum. This organism apparently elaborates some type of toxic activity that lyses membranes; this may explain some of the histopathology of syphilitic disease.

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Fitzgerald, T. J., Repesh, L. A., & Oakes, S. G. (1982). Morphological destruction of cultured cells by the attachment of Treponema pallidum. British Journal of Venereal Diseases, 58(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1136/sti.58.1.1

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