AI Article Synopsis

  • Borrelia burgdorferi relies on Dps proteins to protect its DNA during stress conditions, crucial for its survival in an enzootic cycle.
  • Dps-deficient spirochaetes were still able to infect mice and be acquired by larval ticks, but they failed to transmit when feeding on a new host after being dormant in unfed nymphs.
  • The study highlights the importance of Dps for Borrelia persistence in ticks, suggesting that targeting Dps could help manage Borrelia populations and potentially reduce Lyme disease occurrences.

Article Abstract

Borrelia burgdorferi survives in an enzootic cycle, and Dps proteins protect DNA against damage during starvation or oxidative stress. The role of a Dps homologue encoded by Borrelia in spirochaete survival was assessed. Dps-deficient spirochaetes were infectious in mice via needle-inoculation at the dose of 10(5) spirochaetes. Larval ticks successfully acquired Dps-deficient spirochaetes via a blood meal on mice. However, after extended periods within unfed nymphs, the Dps-deficient spirochaetes failed to be transmitted to a new host when nymphs fed. Our data suggest that Dps functions to protect the spirochaetes during dormancy in unfed ticks, and in its absence, the spirochaetes become susceptible during tick feeding. dps is differentially expressed in vivo- low in mice and high in ticks - but constitutively expressed in vitro, showing little change during growth or in response to oxidative stress. Borrelia Dps forms a dodecameric complex capable of sequestering iron. The Dps-deficient spirochaetes showed no defect in starvation and oxidative stress assays, perhaps due to the lack of iron in spirochaetes grown in vitro. Dps is critical for spirochaete persistence within ticks, and strategies to interfere with Dps could potentially reduce Borrelia populations in nature and thereby influence the incidence of Lyme disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2006.05550.xDOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Borrelia burgdorferi relies on Dps proteins to protect its DNA during stress conditions, crucial for its survival in an enzootic cycle.
  • Dps-deficient spirochaetes were still able to infect mice and be acquired by larval ticks, but they failed to transmit when feeding on a new host after being dormant in unfed nymphs.
  • The study highlights the importance of Dps for Borrelia persistence in ticks, suggesting that targeting Dps could help manage Borrelia populations and potentially reduce Lyme disease occurrences.
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