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  4. Cross-reactive acquired immunity influences transmission success of the Lyme disease pathogen, Borrelia afzelii

Cross-reactive acquired immunity influences transmission success 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
December 2015
In
Infection Genetics and Evolution
No
36
From page
131
To page
140
Subjects
Acquired immunity Borrelia afzelii Cross-immunity Lyme borreliosis Outer surface protein C Pathogen transmission
Abstract
Cross-reactive acquired immunity in the vertebrate host induces indirect competition between strains of a given pathogen species and is critical for understanding the ecology of mixed infections. In vector-borne diseases, cross-reactive antibodies can reduce pathogen transmission at the vector-to-host and the host-to-vector lifecycle transition. The highly polymorphic, immunodominant, outer surface protein C (OspC) of the tick-borne spirochete bacterium Borrelia afzelii induces a strong antibody response in the vertebrate host. To test how cross-immunity in the vertebrate host influences tick-to-host and host-to-tick transmission, mice were immunized with one of two strain-specific recombinant OspC proteins (A3, A10), challenged via tick bite with one of the two B. afzelii ospC strains (A3, A10), and infested with xenodiagnostic ticks. Immunization with a given rOspC antigen protected mice against homologous strains carrying the same major ospC group allele but provided little or no cross-protection against heterologous strains carrying a different major ospC group allele. There were cross-immunity effects on the tick spirochete load but not on the probability of host-to-tick transmission. The spirochete load in ticks that had fed on mice with cross-immune experience was reduced by a factor of two compared to ticks that had fed on naive control mice. In addition, strain-specific differences in mouse spirochete load, host-to-tick transmission, tick spirochete load, and the OspC-specific IgG response revealed the mechanisms that determine variation in transmission success between strains of B. afzelii. This study shows that cross-immunity in infected vertebrate hosts can reduce pathogen load in the arthropod vector with potential consequences for vector-to-host pathogen transmission. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/50430
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