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Infect. Immun., 06 1995, 2206-2212, Vol 63, No. 6
SJ Norris, JK Howell, SA Garza, MS Ferdows and AG Barbour
Borrelias that cause Lyme disease lose the ability to infect and cause
disease in laboratory animals following 10 to 16 passages of in vitro
culture. In this study, clonal populations of the Sh-2-82 (Sh2) and B31
strains of Borrelia burgdorferi were isolated by subsurface plating on
BSK-II agar plates and examined for infectivity in the C3H/HeN mouse model.
Mice were injected intradermally with 10(5) B. burgdorferi organisms, and
the tibiotarsal joint, heart, and bladder were cultured 2 to 4 weeks
postinfection to determine whether viable organisms were present. Clones
exhibited either a high-infectivity phenotype, in which cultures were
consistently positive at all organ sites, or a low- infectivity phenotype,
in which a low proportion of cultures were positive (5 of 40 in a
representative experiment). In an Sh2 population that had undergone five in
vitro passages, 7 of 10 clones were of the high-infectivity phenotype, and
the remaining clones were of the low- infectivity phenotype. The proportion
of high-infectivity clones decreased with continued in vitro passage, with
only 1 of 10 clones exhibiting the high-infectivity phenotype after 10
passages and 0 of 10 clones yielding positive cultures after 20 passages.
Representative high- and low-infectivity clones from passage 5 Sh2 cultures
had 50% infectious doses of 1.8 x 10(2) and 1 x 10(5), respectively.
Subclones consistently reflected the same infectivity phenotypes as those
of the parent clones. The protein profiles and plasmid contents of the
high- and low-infectivity clones were compared and exhibited few
discernible differences. On the basis of these results, the loss of
infectivity during in vitro culture results from the outgrowth of
low-infectivity clones and begins to occur within the first five in vitro
passages. Further examination of clonal populations may lead to the
identification of genetic and protein factors important in the virulence
and pathogenicity of Lyme disease borrelias.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
High- and low-infectivity phenotypes of clonal populations of in vitro- cultured Borrelia burgdorferi
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Texas Medical School at Houston 77225, USA.
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