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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, July 2001, p. 2500-2507, Vol. 39, No. 7
Institute of Arthropodology and Parasitology,
Department of Biology, Georgia Southern University, Statesboro,
Georgia 30460-80561; USA CHPPM, Aberdeen
Proving Ground, Aberdeen, Maryland
210102; and College of Health,
University of North Florida, South, Jacksonville, Florida
322243
Received 20 November 2000/Returned for modification 29 January
2001/Accepted 2 April 2001
Fifty-six strains of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu
lato, isolated from ticks and vertebrate animals in Missouri,
South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, and Texas, were identified and
characterized by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP)
analysis of rrf (5S)-rrl (23S)
intergenic spacer amplicons. A total of 241 to 258 bp of intergenic
spacers between tandemly duplicated rrf (5S) and
rrl (23S) was amplified by PCR. MseI and
DraI restriction fragment polymorphisms were used to
analyze these strains. PCR-RFLP analysis results indicated that the
strains represented at least three genospecies and 10 different
restriction patterns. Most of the strains isolated from the tick
Ixodes dentatus in Missouri and Georgia belonged to the
genospecies Borrelia andersonii. Excluding the I.
dentatus strains, most southern strains, isolated from the
ticks Ixodes scapularis and Ixodes
affinis, the cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus), and
cotton mouse (Peromyscus gossypinus) in Georgia and
Florida, belonged to Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto.
Seven strains, isolated from Ixodes minor, the wood rat (Neotoma floridana), the cotton rat, and the cotton
mouse in South Carolina and Florida, belonged to Borrelia
bissettii. Two strains, MI-8 from Florida and TXW-1 from Texas,
exhibited MseI and DraI restriction
patterns different from those of previously reported genospecies. Eight
Missouri tick strains (MOK-3a group) had MseI patterns
similar to that of B. andersonii reference strain 21038 but had a DraI restriction site in the spacer. Strain
SCGT-8a had DraI restriction patterns identical to that
of strain 25015 (B. bissettii) but differed from strain
25015 in its MseI restriction pattern. Strain AI-1 had
the same DraI pattern as other southern strains in the
B. bissettii genospecies but had a distinct
MseI profile. The taxonomic status of these atypical
strains needs to be further evaluated. To clarify the taxonomic
positions of these atypical Borrelia strains, the
complete sequences of rrf-rrl intergenic spacers from 20 southeastern and Missouri strains were determined. The evolutionary and
phylogenetic relationships of these strains were compared with those
of the described genospecies in the B.
burgdorferi sensu lato species complex. The 20 strains clustered into five separate lineages on the basis of sequence analysis. MI-8 and TXW-1 appeared to belong to two different
undescribed genospecies, although TXW-1 was closely related to
Borrelia garinii. The MOK-3a group separated into a
distinct deep branch in the B. andersonii lineage.
PCR-RFLP analysis results and the results of sequence analyses of the
rrf-rrl intergenic spacer confirm that greater genetic
heterogeneity exists among B. burgdorferi sensu lato
strains isolated from the southern United States than among strains
isolated from the northern United States. The B. andersonii genospecies and its MOK-3a subgroup are associated with the I. dentatus-cottontail rabbit enzootic cycle,
but I. scapularis was also found to harbor a strain of
this genospecies. Strains that appear to be B. bissettii
in our study were isolated from I. minor and the cotton
mouse, cotton rat, and wood rat. The B. burgdorferi
sensu stricto strains from the south are genetically and phenotypically
similar to the B31 reference strain.
0095-1137/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.39.7.2500-2507.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Genetic Heterogeneity of Borrelia
burgdorferi Sensu Lato in the Southern United States Based on
Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism and Sequence
Analysis
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of
Arthropodology and Parasitology, P.O. Box 8056, Georgia Southern
University, Statesboro, GA 30460-8056. Phone: (912) 681-5564. Fax:
(912) 681-0559. E-mail: JOliver{at}GaSoU.edu.
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