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Infection and Immunity, July 2002, p. 3382-3388, Vol. 70, No. 7
0019-9567/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.70.7.3382-3388.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Borrelia burgdorferi Population Kinetics and Selected Gene Expression at the Host-Vector Interface
Emir Hodzic, Sunlian Feng, Kimberly J. Freet, Dori L. Borjesson, and Stephen W. Barthold*
Center for Comparative Medicine, Schools of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, University of California at Davis, Davis, California 95616
Received 29 November 2001/
Returned for modification 30 January 2002/
Accepted 8 April 2002

ABSTRACT
By using real-time quantitative PCR, the population dynamics
and gene transcription of
Borrelia burgdorferi were examined
in ticks and skin of mice during acquisition of the infection
from mice by ticks and during transmission of the infection
from ticks to mice. Population dynamics were determined by using
a
flaB DNA target. A quantitative analysis of
flaB,
ospA,
ospC,
dbpA, and
arp transcription was also performed. The results
revealed that both uninfected larval and nymphal
Ixodes scapularis ticks acquired
B. burgdorferi as early as 1 day after attachment
and that the sizes of spirochete populations within ticks increased
during feeding. In addition, all gene targets revealed that
there was RNA transcription during feeding. Similar events occurred
within infected nymphal ticks feeding on uninfected hosts. Transmission
from infected nymphal ticks to mice could be detected within
1 day after attachment. Analysis of skin during the first 3
days after attachment of infected ticks revealed rising numbers
of spirochetes but minimal gene transcription. In contrast,
the skin of mice with established infections revealed static
populations of spirochetes and active but stable transcription
of
flaB,
ospC,
dbpA, and
arp. There were consistent reductions
in the number of spirochetes in the skin at the tick attachment
sites compared to the number of spirochetes in the skin at nontick
sites, but there were no differences in gene expression between
tick and nontick skin sites. Evidence of
ospA transcription
in skin could be found 1 day after tick attachment but not thereafter.

INTRODUCTION
Borrelia burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease, is
transmitted to and acquired from its hosts by
Ixodes spp. hard
ticks. The principal
Ixodes vectors include
Ixodes ricinus in
Europe,
Ixodes persulcatus in Eastern Europe and Asia, and
Ixodes scapularis and
Ixodes pacificus in North America (
35,
43). Acquisition
and transmission are processes that involve the tick, the host,
and the pathogen in reciprocal interactions with one other.
After attachment, ticks induce host local inflammatory responses
and immune responses against components within their saliva.
To counteract these responses, tick saliva also contains substances
that suppress or divert host immune responses (
31,
46).
In addition to these vector and host processes, B. burgdorferi undergoes dynamic changes within the vector during both acquisition and transmission and within vertebrate hosts after transmission. These changes include striking variations in antigen expression. For example, B. burgdorferi is limited to the midgut of resting (unfed) nymphal and adult ticks (5) and usually express outer surface protein A (OspA) and very rarely OspC (18). After ticks attach and begin feeding, the spirochetes rapidly multiply (12), down-regulate or shed OspA, and up-regulate OspC during their migration to the salivary glands (41). Upon transmission, the spirochetes stay in the skin at the attachment site for several days and then disseminate throughout the vertebrate host (42). Early in infection, spirochetes express OspC but not OspA (11, 30, 37). In addition to these two lipoproteins that seem to be involved in adaptation to different environments, there is mounting evidence that genes encoding different antigens are differentially expressed or repressed in response to a variety of environmental cues during pathogen-tick-host interactions (7, 8, 13, 22, 26, 27, 32, 38, 39, 41, 44, 45).
The purpose of the present investigation was to examine B. burgdorferi population dynamics and differential gene expression at the host-vector interface by quantitative DNA and RNA analysis of selected prototype genes. The genes that were investigated for expression included those that encode OspA and OspC, two well-defined lipoproteins with known differential expression; decorin binding protein A (DbpA), a 22-kDA highly immunogenic antigen that is expressed during infection (15); arthritis-related protein (Arp), a 37-kDa lipoprotein that elicits antibodies that selectively induce arthritis resolution (14); and FlaB, a structural component of flagellin, which is presumed to be constitutively expressed by spirochetes in both ticks and hosts during infection (2).

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Mice.
C3H/HeN specific-pathogen-free mice that were 3 to 5 weeks old
were purchased from Frederick Cancer Research Center (Frederick,
Md.). The mice were housed in an isolation room, provided food
and water ad libitum, and killed by carbon dioxide asphyxiation.
At the time of necropsy, urinary bladder and ear samples were
cultured from each mouse, as described previously (
4). At necropsy,
mice inoculated with
B. burgdorferi were all confirmed to be
culture positive, while none of the control mice was culture
positive.
B. burgdorferi.
A clonal strain of B. burgdorferi sensu stricto (cN40) was used (4). B. burgdorferi was cultured in BSK II medium and enumerated as described previously (24). In this study, mice were inoculated intradermally with 104 mid-log-phase spirochetes at the base of the tail.
Ticks.
Adult I. scapularis ticks were field collected in southern Connecticut and were cordially provided by Durland Fish of Yale University, New Haven, Conn. These adults produced uninfected larvae for experimental use. All larvae were derived from a single cohort for the experiments described in this paper. To generate infected and uninfected nymphs, larvae were allowed to attach to and engorge on C3H mice that had been infected with B. burgdorferi for 2 weeks or were allowed to feed on uninfected mice (controls). Engorged larvae were collected from infected and uninfected mice separately and then allowed to molt and harden into nymphs. Ten percent of the pools of molted infected and uninfected nymphs were tested by PCR (flaB DNA) (see below) to verify the infection status and the prevalence of infection. Of the nymphs derived from larvae that fed on infected mice (65 individual samples), 96.92% were PCR positive; none of the nymphs derived from larvae that fed on uninfected mice (47 individual samples) was PCR positive.
B. burgdorferi quantitative detection.
Uniform samples of shaved skin were obtained with 3-mm-diameter disposable biopsy punches (Premiere Medical Products). Skin samples were weighed immediately after collection. Skin samples were snap frozen in liquid nitrogen, pulverized, and homogenized, and then they were split equally for DNA and RNA extraction. Paired ticks from each mouse were processed for DNA and RNA extraction. DNA was extracted with DNeasy tissue kits used according to the manufacturer's instruction for tissues and insects (Qiagen, Valencia, Calif.). The copy number of each B. burgdorferi target gene was expressed per milligram of skin or per tick. For quantitative analysis of DNA extracted from skin samples and from ticks, real-time PCR was used, as described previously (25). Three oligonucleotides, two primers, and a probe for each B. burgdorferi target gene were selected by using Primer Express software (PE Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.), as shown in Table 1.
To quantify the copy number of each DNA gene target, plasmid
standards were prepared in order to create absolute standard
curves. The primers for the
flaB gene (nucleotides 87 to 119
and 659 to 677) amplified a 591-bp fragment. The primers for
the
ospA gene (nucleotides 164 to 184 and 655 to 672) amplified
a 509-bp fragment. The primers for the
ospC gene (nucleotides
complementary to DNA flanking regions approximately 30 bp upstream
and downstream of the gene) amplified a 730-bp fragment. The
primers for the
dbpA gene (nucleotides 1 to 21 and 563 to 582)
amplified a 582-bp fragment. The primers for the
arp gene (nucleotides
1 to 18 and 952 to 978) amplified a 978-bp fragment. Each fragment
was cloned into the pCR2.1 vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.).
To create standard curves for each gene, plasmid DNA was used
as the template and serially diluted 10
9-fold in triplicate.
The threshold cycles for quantification were defined from baseline
cycles for each gene. Each plasmid dilution, representing the
plot of threshold cycle value versus the log of copy number,
was included in each PCR, which was then used to calculate an
unknown amount of DNA in examined samples. The analytical sensitivity
for each target gene was in the range from 1 to 10
9 copies.
To check the sensitivity of real-time PCR, tissue samples from
naïve mice were spiked with a dilution series of
B. burgdorferi (10
6 to 10
1 spirochetes). From each spiked tissue sample, the
target genes were amplified, and the copy numbers were 81 to
88.5% of the input. The expected yield of purified DNA from
tissue samples is around 80%, so the loss of 11.5 to 19% of
the spirochetes was within the range desired.
Analysis of mRNA.
Total RNA from each sample was purified by using RNeasy mini kits according to the manufacturer's instruction for tissues or insects (Qiagen). Samples were homogenized with QIAshredder, and prior to elution they were treated with RNase-free DNase I. The concentration and purity of extracted RNA were determined by measuring the A260 and A280. Extracted total RNA was stored at -80°C until it was used. The extracted total RNA was used for two separate reactions, one to synthesize cDNA and the other to test for DNA contamination. The reverse transcription step was performed by utilizing TaqMan reverse transcription reagents (PE Biosystems) with (for the cDNA synthesis reaction) and without (for the control reaction) reverse transcriptase. cDNA synthesis and control reaction mixtures were amplified in a standard heat block instrument after incubation for 10 min at 25°C following transcription at 48°C for 30 min and inactivation at 95°C for 5 min. Following cDNA synthesis, a real-time PCR was performed in new tubes to which cDNA and control preparations were added, as described above. DNA standard curves created for each target gene were not used for absolute quantification of RNA because there was no control for the efficiency of the reverse transcription. Therefore, standard curves were created with in vitro-transcribed RNA by using the RiboProbe in vitro transcription system (Promega, Madison, Wis.). The concentration of purified transcribed RNA was measured by absorbance and then converted to the number of copies by using the molecular weight of the RNA. Serial dilutions of in vitro-transcribed RNA were prepared in triplicate. The analytical sensitivity for each target gene was in the range from 101 to 109 copies.
Experimental plan.
In the first experiment we examined B. burgdorferi acquisition kinetics and patterns of selected gene expression in uninfected nymphal ticks feeding on infected hosts. Sixteen C3H mice were infected with B. burgdorferi by intradermal inoculation, and eight mice were sham inoculated with BSK II medium. Two weeks after inoculation, each mouse was infested with four uninfected nymphal ticks. At zero time and 1, 2, and 3 days after tick attachment, four infected and two uninfected mice were killed. Paired skin samples were taken from the tick sites and from contralateral nontick attachment sites. At the same time, feeding ticks were removed from each mouse, and two ticks from each mouse were processed for DNA and RNA extraction. The remaining nymphal ticks were collected after engorgement, left in a humidify chamber to molt, and then 10 days later collected and used for DNA and RNA extraction.
To confirm the findings obtained in the first experiment and to explore B. burgdorferi gene expression in larval ticks, 16 mice were infected for 2 weeks and then infested with four noninfected nymphal ticks each; also, eight infected mice were infested with approximately 50 larval ticks each. Skin samples and feeding nymphal ticks were collected from mice infested with nymphal ticks as described above. Six feeding larval ticks were removed from each mouse at zero time and on days 1, 2, and 3 after tick attachment (eight pools of six larvae each per interval). The remaining larval ticks were collected after engorgement, left in a humidify chamber to molt, and then collected and used for DNA and RNA extraction 10 days later.
In an effort to examine population kinetics and gene expression profiles in infected ticks feeding on uninfected mice (in contrast to the experiments described above, in which uninfected ticks feeding on infected hosts were examined), 16 uninfected mice were each infested with four B. burgdorferi infected nymphal ticks. At zero time and 1, 2, and 3 days after tick attachment, paired skin samples from the tick sites and from contralateral nontick sites of four mice at each time point were collected as described above. The ticks and tissues were processed as described above. The experiment was repeated by using the same number of mice and the same procedure.
Statistics.
Statistical comparisons between infected and uninfected mice or ticks were made by using a Student's t test (SPSS, version 6.1 for Macintosh; SPSS Inc., Chicago, Ill.). A multiple-comparison analysis was performed by using a one-way analysis of variance, followed by a least-squares difference post hoc test. Calculated P values of <0.05 were considered significant.

RESULTS
Spirochete population kinetics and gene expression in uninfected ticks feeding on infected mice.
Uninfected nymphal ticks that fed on infected mice began acquiring
spirochetes during the earliest sampling interval (day 1) after
attachment (Fig.
1). Based upon
flaB DNA copy numbers, the number
of spirochetes within nymphal ticks increased significantly
during feeding and then plateaued through molting. Fewer spirochetes
were detected in larval ticks than in nymphal ticks (commensurate
with the smaller size of the larval ticks), but the population
kinetics were similar (data not shown)
.
In both nymphal and larval ticks,
flaB and
ospA RNA were first
detected within 1 day of tick attachment; the levels rose between
day 1 and 2 after attachment and then declined at day 10.
ospC RNA was first detected on day 2 after tick attachment, and the
levels rose between day 2 and day 3 after attachment and then
declined by day 10 (Fig.
1; data for larval ticks not shown).
A somewhat different pattern was observed for
dbpA and
arp RNA,
whose levels seemed to increase gradually during feeding and
molting of nymphal ticks. Since all gene targets were analyzed
by using the same cDNA samples, the relative differences in
expression patterns suggested different kinetics. When they
were compared to spirochete numbers (based upon
flaB DNA), the
data suggested that
flaB,
ospA, and
ospC expression rose with
the proliferation or acquisition of spirochetes in feeding ticks
on days 1 through 3 and then declined relative to the numbers
of spirochetes on day 10, when the spirochete numbers had plateaued.
In contrast, the levels of
dbpA and
arp both increased gradually
through day 10.
Spirochete kinetics and gene expression in host skin of infected mice in response to uninfected tick feeding.
Skin samples obtained from infected mice at the nymphal tick attachment sites and from the nontick sites at each time point were all PCR positive (Fig. 2). None of the samples from uninfected mice were positive for flaB DNA. Based upon flaB DNA copy numbers, there were consistently fewer spirochetes per milligram of skin tissue at the tick attachment sites than at the nontick sites on days 2 and 3 (P = 0.044 and P = 0.026, respectively, as determined by paired Student's t test). There was also a significant decrease in the number of spirochetes at the tick attachment site on day 1 compared to the number at zero time (P = 0.045). These results suggested that there was active uptake of spirochetes by ticks but no notable proliferation of spirochetes within host skin in response to tick attachment and feeding.
There were no apparent differences in the levels of
flaB,
ospA,
ospC,
dbpA, and
arp RNA in skin at tick attachment sites and
at nontick sites of infected mice at zero time and 1, 2, and
3 days after tick attachment (Fig.
2). As expected,
ospA RNA
was not detected in skin at any time.
ospC RNA was inconsistently
detected in skin from some sites but not all sites (mostly at
the nontick sites).
flaB, dbpA, and
arp RNA were detected in
nearly all skin samples. These findings suggested that there
were no differences in gene expression by spirochetes in the
skin at tick attachment sites and nontick sites in mice with
established infections.
Spirochete population kinetics and gene expression in infected ticks feeding on uninfected mice.
Based upon quantification of spirochetal flaB DNA, attachment and feeding of nymphal ticks on uninfected mice stimulated spirochetal proliferation within the feeding ticks after attachment and the results were significant on day 1 (P = 0.0036), day 2 (P = 0.026), or day 3 (P = 0.0005) compared to zero time (Fig. 3). Evaluation of B. burgdorferi gene expression in infected ticks prior to and during feeding revealed RNA transcription of flaB, ospA, ospC, dbpA, and arp at all times after tick attachment (Fig. 3). The peak mRNA levels for all targets were observed on day 2 after tick attachment, and there were decreases on day 3 (Fig. 3).
Spirochete population kinetics and gene expression in host skin of uninfected mice in response to infected-tick feeding.
Twenty-four hours after tick attachment,
flaB DNA was detected
in the skin at the tick attachment sites in four of eight mice.
All tick attachment sites were
flaB DNA positive at later times,
and the spirochete numbers rose between days 1 and 2 (Fig.
4).
Thus, attachment and feeding stimulated spirochete proliferation
within the ticks, and transmission of spirochetes from the ticks
to the hosts could be detected as early as 1 day after tick
attachment. Analysis of nontick sites revealed dissemination
of spirochetes, based upon the presence of
flaB DNA in skin
samples from two of eight mice at 3 days after tick attachment
but not at earlier times.
Despite the detectable presence of approximately the same amount
of spirochetal DNA at the tick attachment sites after 1 day
and thereafter, the gene expression was remarkably low (Fig.
4) compared to that of spirochetes in the skin of mice with
established infections (Fig.
2). The most striking finding was
the lack of
flaB RNA expression at tick attachment sites 1,
2, and 3 days after tick attachment.
ospA transcription was
detected transiently during early transmission (on day 1), in
contrast to
ospC RNA
, which was detected after 3 days but not
earlier (on days 1 and 2).
dbpA and
arp RNA were either absent
or detected at low levels. These results suggest that during
the early stages of entry into the host, spirochetes are not
particularly active until the dissemination stage. The 3-day
interval, in which
ospC was up-regulated to levels found during
disseminated infection (Fig.
2), may represent the beginning
of this process. Comparison of
dbpA and
arp gene expression
early in infection (Fig.
4) and
dbpA and
arp gene expression
during disseminated infection (Fig.
2) suggested that these
genes are up-regulated between 3 days and 2 weeks.

DISCUSSION
During their life cycle, ticks feed as larvae on small rodent
reservoir hosts, thereby acquiring
B. burgdorferi spirochetes.
Spirochetes remain in the ticks as they molt into nymphs and
adults. Examination of flat (unfed) nymphal ticks used in this
study revealed that the mean number of spirochetes was 5
x 10
4 cells per tick, which correlated with the number that we have
found in nymphal ticks used for several other experiments and
is in accordance with similar results reported by other workers
(
6). As shown by other workers (
12) and in the present study,
feeding stimulates spirochetes to rapidly multiply within ticks,
as observed in infected ticks during feeding. Our results indicate
that feeding ticks acquire spirochetes within 1 day after attachment
to infected hosts and that hosts acquire spirochetes within
1 day after attachment of infected ticks. Other workers have
shown that there is transmission within 1 day, but at a very
low rate (
36). The differences are likely to be due to spirochete
isolation and experimental variables, but the data demonstrate
that transmission can be quite rapid.
Using quantitative PCR, we have previously found significantly lower numbers of spirochetes at tick attachment sites than at nontick sites for mice with established infections (24). The present study confirmed this observation, suggesting that spirochetes actively leave the site of tick attachment (and move into the tick). The diminished number of spirochetes in the skin at the tick attachment site correlates with the concomitant acquisition of spirochetes by a feeding tick. Investigating these findings further, we assessed expression of selected genes in the skin at the tick attachment sites and at nontick skin sites. No apparent differences in levels of transcription of flaB, ospA, ospC, dbpA, or arp were observed. These results suggested that tick attachment and feeding do not influence RNA transcriptional activity of spirochetes and do not recruit spirochetes to a tick site. Thus, acquisition of spirochetes by feeding ticks appears to be a passive process for spirochetes.
On the other hand, interaction of spirochetes with the tick and/or the host results in dynamic spirochetal changes, including genetic variation and shifts in protein expression through both antigenic variation and antigenic modulation (reviewed in reference 3). Certainly, some of these changes are means of avoiding immune clearance, but in the absence of immune pressure, it is likely that changes in protein expression allow spirochete adaptation to the markedly varied environments of the tick and the host. A variety of environmental stimuli can invoke shifts in gene and protein expression in vitro (7, 8, 13, 27, 32, 38, 39, 41, 44, 45). Differential protein expression is also likely to facilitate spirochete transmission from the tick midgut to tick salivary glands and to the host's dermis during feeding (34).
Some workers have shown that spirochetes in flat (unfed) I. scapularis ticks express OspA but not OspC (33, 41), while other workers have reported spirochetal expression of OspC in unfed I. ricinus ticks (18, 30). In our study, we detected ospA RNA in all unfed nymphal ticks tested and ospC RNA in some of the unfed ticks tested. We found that during acquisition of spirochetes by both larval and nymphal ticks feeding on infected mice, ospA was transcriptionally up-regulated by spirochetes in feeding ticks but was not detected in the skin of the infected mice. These results confirm the premise that OspA is a tick-regulated antigen. OspA appears to facilitate spirochete attachment to the tick gut by binding to an I. scapularis protein (34). In a recent study that examined OspA expression in ticks by immunohistochemistry, it was found that spirochetes expressed OspA but not OspC in flat ticks and OspC expression increased during feeding, whereas OspA expression decreased (40). Our findings indicate that both ospA and ospC mRNA transcription occurred in uninfected ticks feeding on infected mice, as well as in infected ticks feeding on uninfected mice during the feeding process. The quantitative kinetics of these gene targets, as well as flaB, suggested that the increases parallel the population kinetics of spirochete proliferation within feeding ticks. Differences among studies can be readily explained by differences related to transcription, translation, and shedding of gene products. Our finding that there was decreased ospA and ospC transcription after molting (10 days) is in accordance with similar results showing that there was decreased OspA and OspC protein expression in ticks following feeding to repletion, as determined by other workers (33, 40). In vitro studies have shown that expression of OspA and expression of OspC increase in the presence of tick hemolymph and at a lower temperature (28, 32).
Less is known about the differential expression of genes or the effects of the gene products within the host, but it is logical that some gene products facilitate spirochete dissemination. For example, DbpA binds decorin on collagen (21), which is consistent with the strong dermatotropism of this organism. Immunization against DbpA has been shown to elicit protective immunity against syringe challenge but not tick challenge (15, 22, 23). An intriguing protein is Arp, which elicits an antibody response that is not protective but, when antiserum is passively transferred to infected mice, selectively resolves arthritis with no apparent effect upon carditis or the infection status (14). There are a number of other proteins that have possible biologic effects during host infection, including binding to fibronectin (20), proteoglycans (29), glycosphingolipids (1), plasminogen (10), and integrins (9).
With the optimization of RNA detection methods, differential B. burgdorferi gene expression is being examined in both the vector and the host. Transcription of erpT (which is not an erp gene or a gene encoding an E/F related protein but rather is a truncated version of arp) and transcription of bbk32 were both shown to be expressed in engorged ticks (16, 17). A more comprehensive study has recently been published, in which several genes, including ospA, ospC, flaB, erpA/I/N, erpB/J/O, rev, and mlpA, were shown to be transcriptionally active in both larval and nymphal ticks following feeding. Furthermore, ospC, mlpA, and rev transcription was not detected in the resting or flat-tick stage. Another gene that has been found to be expressed in the host, bba64, was not detected at any time in ticks (19). The gene targets that were chosen for analysis were targets shown to be regulated by environmental stimuli, including expression in the host during infection.
In the present study, we selected flaB, ospA, and ospC for similar reasons, but we focused on two immunodominant antigens (dbpA and arp) that invoke biologically relevant immune responses (protective immunity and arthritis-resolving immunity) during infection. In this study we utilized a more sensitive, real-time PCR method to examine both quantitative spirochete population kinetics and gene transcription. The sensitivity of this method allowed analysis of individual ticks rather than pools of ticks. This approach revealed a pattern of rising flaB, ospA, and ospC transcription during tick feeding, followed by a decline after molting. Similar patterns occurred in uninfected ticks that acquired the infection during feeding and in already infected ticks during the course of feeding. Feeding also stimulated dbpA and arp transcription within ticks. Transcription of flaB, dbpA, and arp was evident within the dermis of infected mice, whereas ospC transcription was found to be quite variable. Previous studies, in which the less sensitive reverse transcription-PCR method was used, revealed that erpT (truncated arp) was not transcribed during early infection (16). The sensitivity of real-time PCR allowed transient detection of low levels of ospA transcription in the host dermis after 1 day but not thereafter. Of all of the gene targets examined, transcription of ospA had the most striking on-off pattern in different environments. Results confirmed that ospA transcription does not occur in the host, and its transient presence early in infection is likely to be a residual event in spirochetes leaving a tick.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant AI 26815
from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
and by Public Health Service grant RR 07038 from the National
Center for Research Resources.
We thank Amy Smith for technical support and Michele Papero for supplying larval ticks to us.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Center for Comparative Medicine, University of California at Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616. Phone: (530) 752-1245. Fax: (530) 752-7914. E-mail:
swbarthold{at}ucdavis.edu.

Editor: J. M. Mansfield

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Infection and Immunity, July 2002, p. 3382-3388, Vol. 70, No. 7
0019-9567/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.70.7.3382-3388.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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