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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, January 2000, p. 362-368, Vol. 38, No. 1
Department of Laboratory Medicine and
Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota
559051; Corixa Corporation, Seattle,
Washington 981042; Department of
Tropical Public Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston,
Massachusetts 021153; and Department
of Pediatrics, Connecticut Children's Medical Center, Hartford,
Connecticut 061064
Received 16 July 1999/Accepted 25 October 1999
Human babesiosis in the United States is caused predominantly by
Babesia microti, a tick-transmitted blood parasite.
Improved testing methods for the detection of infection with this
parasite are needed, since asymptomatic B. microti
infection represents a potential threat to the blood supply in areas
where B. microti is endemic. We performed immunoscreening
of an expression library of genomic DNA from a human isolate of
B. microti (strain MN1). Among 17 unique immunoreactive
clones, we identified 9 which represent a related family of genes with
little sequence homology to other known sequences but with an
architecture resembling that of several surface proteins of
Plasmodium. Within this family, a tandem array of a
degenerate six-amino-acid repeat (SEAGGP, SEAGWP, SGTGWP, SGTVGP) was
found in various lengths between relatively well conserved segments at
the N and C termini. In order to examine within-clone variation, we
developed a PCR protocol for direct recovery of a specific
bmn1-6 homologue directly from 30 human blood isolates, 4 corresponding hamster isolates, and 5 geographically corresponding Peromyscus leucopus (white-footed mouse) isolates. Isolates
from the hamsters had the same sequences as those found in the
corresponding human blood, suggesting that genetic variation of
bmn1-6 does not occur during passage. However, clones from
different patients were often substantially different from each other
with regard to the number and location of the degenerate repeats within
the bmn1-6 homologue. Moreover, we found that strains that
were closely related geographically were also closely related at the
sequence level; nine patients, all from Nantucket Island, Mass.,
harbored clones that were indistinguishable from each other but that
were distinct from those found in other northeastern or upper
midwestern strains. We conclude that considerable genetic and antigenic
diversity exists among isolates of B. microti from the
United States and that geographic clustering of subtypes may exist. The
nature of the bmn1-6 gene family suggests a mechanism of
antigenic variation in B. microti that may occur by
recombination, differential expression, or a combination of both mechanisms.
0095-1137/0/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
A Polymorphic Multigene Family Encoding an
Immunodominant Protein from Babesia microti
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Infectious
Disease Research Institute/Corixa Corporation, Seattle Life Sciences
Center, Suite 600, 1124 Columbia St., Seattle, WA 98104. Phone: (206) 754-5711 Fax: (206) 754-5715. E-mail: persing{at}corixa.com.
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