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Infection and Immunity, March 2000, p. 1514-1518, Vol. 68, No. 3
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health,
Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520-8034
Received 18 August 1999/Returned for modification 22 September
1999/Accepted 15 December 1999
Infection with Ehrlichia phagocytophila in white-footed
mice is transient and followed by a strong immune response. We
investigated whether the presence of acquired immunity against E. phagocytophila precludes white-footed mice from
further maintenance of this agent in nature. Mice were infected with
E. phagocytophila via tick bite and challenged either 12 or
16 weeks later by Ixodes scapularis nymphs infected with
the same agent. Xenodiagnostic larvae fed upon each mouse
simultaneously with challenging nymphs and 1 week thereafter. Ticks
were tested for the agent by PCR, and the prevalence of infection was
compared to that in ticks that fed upon nonimmune control mice. Only
30% of immunized mice sustained cofeeding transmission of E. phagocytophila between simultaneously feeding infected and uninfected ticks, compared to 100% of control mice. An average of
6.3% of xenodiagnostic ticks acquired Ehrlichia from
previously immunized mice when fed 1 week after the challenge, compared
to 82.5% infection in the control group. Although an immune response to a single infection with E. phagocytophila in
white-footed mice provided only partial protection against reinfection
with the same agent, the majority of mice were rendered reservoir
incompetent for at least 12 to 16 weeks. Immunity acquired by mice
during I. scapularis nymphal activity in early summer may
exclude a large proportion of the mouse population from maintaining
E. phagocytophila during the period of larval activity
later in the season.
0019-9567/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Immunity Reduces Reservoir Host
Competence of Peromyscus leucopus for
Ehrlichia phagocytophila
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale School of Medicine, 60 College
St., P.O. Box 208034, New Haven, CT 06520-8034. Phone: (203) 785-3525. Fax: (203) 785-3604. E-mail: durland.fish{at}yale.edu.
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