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  4. Strain-specific antibodies reduce co-feeding transmission of the Lyme disease pathogen, Borrelia afzelii

Strain-specific antibodies reduce co-feeding transmission of the Lyme disease pathogen, Borrelia afzelii

Author(s)
Jacquet, Maxime  
Faculté des sciences  
Durand, Jonas  
Faculté des sciences  
Rais, Olivier  
Institut de biologie  
Voordouw, Maarten  
Institut de biologie  
Date issued
March 2016
In
Environmental Microbiology
Vol
3
No
18
From page
833
To page
845
Subjects
BURGDORFERI SENSU-LATO IXODES-RICINUS TICKS OUTER-SURFACE PROTEIN BORNE ENCEPHALITIS-VIRUS SALIVARY-GLAND EXTRACT NON-VIREMIC TRANSMISSION PARASITE IMMUNE EVASION PEROMYSCUS-LEUCOPUS GENETIC DIVERSITY ACTIVE IMMUNIZATION
Abstract
Vector-borne pathogens use a diversity of strategies to evade the vertebrate immune system. Co-feeding transmission is a potential immune evasion strategy because the vector-borne pathogen minimizes the time spent in the vertebrate host. We tested whether the Lyme disease pathogen, Borrelia afzelii, can use co-feeding transmission to escape the acquired immune response in the vertebrate host. We induced a strain-specific, protective antibody response by immunizing mice with one of two variants of OspC (A3 and A10), the highly variable outer surface protein C of Borrelia pathogens. Immunized mice were challenged via tick bite with B.afzelii strains A3 or A10 and infested with larval ticks at days 2 and 34 post-infection to measure co-feeding and systemic transmission respectively. Antibodies against a particular OspC variant significantly reduced co-feeding transmission of the targeted (homologous) strain but not the non-targeted (heterologous) strain. Cross-immunity between OspC antigens had no effect in co-feeding ticks but reduced the spirochaete load twofold in ticks infected via systemic transmission. In summary, OspC-specific antibodies reduced co-feeding transmission of a homologous but not a heterologous strain of B.afzelii. Co-feeding transmission allowed B.afzelii to evade the negative consequences of cross-immunity on the tick spirochaete load.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/53558
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