CHKMICAL PRODUCTS OF BACTERIA. 41 



tiou of tlic toxic products in filtered culture fluids. Wooldridge, 

 Ilankin, and Martin studied the products of Bacillus anthraci>. 

 ( 'h.-irrin. and later Woodhead, Wood, and Blagovestchensky, investi- 

 gated on these lines Bacillus pyocyaneus. Roux and Chamberland 

 experimented with the bacillus of malignant oedema; Roux with 

 >vmptomatic anthrax; Ohantemesse and Widal with the typhoid 

 bacillus. Roux, Yersiii, Brieger, Fraiikel, Martin, and Behring 

 worked on the same lines with diphtheria. Koch introduced 

 tuberculin, Kalning mallein, while others have utilised the products 

 of streptococci and pneumococci. Anrep found an albumose in the 

 medulla of rabid animals, and Babes claims to have found an 

 albumose in both rabies and glanders. 



Cholera. Brieger found several ptomaines, including putresciii 

 and cadaverin, in pure cultures of the spirillum of Asiatic cholera, 

 and Petri found in addition to poisonous bases a proteid body which 

 produces in guinea-pigs muscular tremors, paralysis, and a rapidly 

 fatal result. Roux and Yersiii obtained from cultures a tox-albumin 

 insoluble in water, which kills guinea-pigs in two or three days, 

 but has no effect on rabbits. Pfeiffer also investigated the toxic 

 substances in cultures. Chloroform, thymol, and drying destroyed 

 comma -bacilli, leaving their toxic products unaffected. Concentrated 

 solutions of neutral salts and boiling produced secondary toxic 

 substance^, but the original toxic substances were ten or twenty 

 tirnes more virulent. 



Typhoid Fever. Typhotoxin (C 7 H 17 NO 2 ), the alkaloid ob- 

 tained by Brieger from cultures of the typhoid fever bacillus, produces 

 in mice and guinea-pigs salivation, rapid breathing, dilatation of the 

 pupil, diarrhoea, and death in twenty-four to forty-eight hours. At 

 the po>t- mortem examination the heart is found in a state of systolic 

 contraction, and the condition of the heart after death and the 

 absence of convulsions during life serve to distinguish typhotoxin 

 from an isomeric base obtained by Brieger from putrid horse -flesh. 

 Roux and Yersin have obtained a tox-albumin. It is soluble with 

 ditiiculty in water, and more toxic to rabbits than guinea-pigs. 



Tetanus. Brieger obtained the alkaloid tetanin from impure 

 cultures of the tetanus bacillus. It is a base having the formula 

 ; 1!--X-O 4 . The hydrochloride is a very deliquescent salt, and 

 soluble in alcohol. Tetanin injected into guinea-pigs produces 

 rapid breathing, followed by tetanic convulsions. Another toxic 

 product, tetfinotrj.i:in (C^H^N), produces the same effects as tetanin. 

 The formula of a third base, apasiiwtoxin, has not been determined. 

 C'adaverin and putre>cin are also present in cultures. Kitasato and 



