Journal
TICKS AND TICK-BORNE DISEASES
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2020.101587
Keywords
Borrelia miyamotoi; Tick-borne relapsing fever; Multiplex PCR
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Funding
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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Research shows that Borrelia miyamotoi maintains all plasmids and genetic stability during long-term in vitro cultivation. The pathogen remains infectious in mice and the process of in vitro culture does not affect its genome.
Borrelia miyamotoi is a tick-borne spirochete of the relapsing fever borrelia group and an emerging pathogen of public health significance. The genomes of relapsing fever borreliae and Lyme disease borreliae consist of multiple linear and circular plasmids in addition to the chromosome. Previous work with B. burgdorferi sensu lato found diminished infectivity upon continuous in vitro culture passage that was attributable to plasmid loss. The effect of long-term culture passage on B. miyamotoi is not known. We generated a series of plasmid-specific primer sets and developed a multiplex PCR assay to detect the 14 known plasmids of B. miyamotoi North American strains LB-2001 and CT13-2396. We assessed the plasmid content of B. miyamotoi LB-2001 over 64 culture passages spanning 15 months and determined that strain LB-2001 retained all plasmids upon prolonged in vitro cultivation and remained infectious in mice. We also found that strain LB-2001 lacks plasmid lp20- 1 which is present in strain CT13-2396. These results suggest that B. miyamotoi remains genetically stable when cultured and passaged in vitro.
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