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  4. Apodemus sp. rodents, reservoir hosts for Borrelia afzelii in an endemic area in Switzerland
 
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Apodemus sp. rodents, reservoir hosts for Borrelia afzelii in an endemic area in Switzerland

Auteur(s)
Hu, Chang Min
Humair, Pierre-François
Wallich, Reinhard
Gern, Lise 
Institut de biologie 
Date de parution
1997
In
Zentralblatt Fur Bakteriologie-International Journal of Medical Microbiology Virology Parasitology and Infectious Diseases
Vol.
4
No
285
De la page
558
A la page
564
Mots-clés
  • IXODES-RICINUS TICKS
  • BURGDORFERI SENSU-LATO
  • LYME BORRELIOSIS
  • MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODIES
  • SMALL MAMMALS
  • SP-NOV
  • MANIFESTATIONS
  • PROTEIN
  • 5S
  • IXODES-RICINUS TICKS

  • BURGDORFERI SENSU-LAT...

  • LYME BORRELIOSIS

  • MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODIES...

  • SMALL MAMMALS

  • SP-NOV

  • MANIFESTATIONS

  • PROTEIN

  • 5S

Résumé
Borrelia burgdorferi is maintained in nature in transmission cycles alternatively involving ticks and reservoir hosts. Small rodents like Apodemus mice and Clethrionomys voles are the primary reservoir of Lyme disease in Europe. In this study, we analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blot 20 borrelial isolates from xenodiagnostic ticks fed on four Apodemus sp. mice captured in the Staatswald forest (Switzerland). All isolates but one showed a homogeneous protein pattern expressing an outer surface protein, (Osp) A of 32 kDa and an OspB of 35 kDa and reacted with monoclonal antibody (mAb) I 17.3 specific for B. afzelii. One isolate expressed an OspA of 32.5 kDa and an OspB of 35 kDa and did not react with species-specific mAbs I 17.3, D6 and H3TS, but was shown to belong to B., afzelii by Southern blot analysis. The possibility exists that non-cultivatable borreliae are present in xenodiagnostic ticks. However, our results clearly show that Apodemus sp. are reservoir hosts for B. afzelii, since this genospecies is transmitted from Apodemus sp. to feeding larval ticks.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/11767
Type de publication
journal article
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