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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 12 1995, 3164-3168, Vol 33, No. 12
CM Shih, LP Liu and A Spielman
We determined whether the infectivity of the Lyme disease spirochete
(Borrelia burgdorferi) to vector ticks varies with the duration of
infection in laboratory mice. Thus, noninfected nymphal deer ticks were
permitted to feed on two strains of early (2 months after infection) and
late (8 months after infection) spirochete-infected mice. The attached
ticks were removed from their hosts at specified time intervals and were
thereafter examined for spirochetes by direct immunofluorescence
microscopy. Spirochetes can be acquired by nymphal ticks as fast as 8 h
after attachment. More than 80% of the attached ticks acquired spirochetal
infection within 48 h after feeding on early spirochete-infected mice. In
contrast, spirochetal infectivity to ticks was less than 50% after feeding
on late spirochete-infected mice. The overall infectivity of
spirochete-infected mice to ticks correlated with the duration of tick
attachment. In addition, there was no adverse effect on the spirochetal
infectivity to ticks by high levels of host antibody against spirochetes,
and no obvious differences in infectivity to ticks was observed by the site
of tick feeding. We conclude that the span of spirochetal infectivity to
ticks varies with the duration of infection in mice and suggest that
spirochetes may persist and may be evenly distributed in the skin of
infected hosts, regardless of prominent host immunity.
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Differential spirochetal infectivities to vector ticks of mice chronically infected by the agent of Lyme disease
Department of Parasitology and Tropical Medicine, National Defense Medical Center, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of China.
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