AI Article Synopsis

  • Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne illness in the U.S., affecting about 300,000 people annually, while babesiosis has around 2,000 cases per year, often resulting in more severe symptoms when both infections occur simultaneously.
  • The study examined how each pathogen influences the immune response in young and older mice, finding that younger mice have a stronger Th1 immune response that helps to resolve both infections, whereas older mice rely on a Th2 response that primarily mitigates Lyme disease symptoms.
  • The research indicates that young mice infected with both pathogens have increased inflammation and persistence of Lyme disease due to a decrease in pathogen-specific antibodies, suggesting a complex interaction between immune response and disease outcome in tick-borne co-infections.

Article Abstract

Lyme disease is the most prominent tick-borne disease with 300,000 cases estimated by CDC every year while ~2,000 cases of babesiosis occur per year in the United States. Simultaneous infection with and are now the most common tick-transmitted coinfections in the U.S.A., and they are a serious health problem because coinfected patients show more intense and persisting disease symptoms. is an extracellular spirochete responsible for systemic Lyme disease while is a protozoan that infects erythrocytes and causes babesiosis. Immune status and spleen health are important for resolution of babesiosis, which is more severe and even fatal in the elderly and splenectomized patients. Therefore, we investigated the effect of each pathogen on host immune response and consequently on severity of disease manifestations in both young, and 30 weeks old C3H mice. At the acute stage of infection, Th1 polarization in young mice spleen was associated with increased IFN-γ and TNF-α producing T cells and a high Tregs/Th17 ratio. Together, these changes could help in the resolution of both infections in young mice and also prevent fatality by infection as observed with WA-1 strain of . In older mature mice, Th2 polarization at acute phase of infection could play a more effective role in preventing Lyme disease symptoms. As a result, enhanced survival and increased tissue colonization results in severe Lyme arthritis only in young coinfected mice. At 3 weeks post-infection, diminished pathogen-specific antibody production in coinfected young, but not older mice, as compared to mice infected with each pathogen individually may also contribute to increased inflammation observed due to infection, thus causing persistent Lyme disease observed in coinfected mice and reported in patients. Thus, higher combined proinflammatory response to due to Th1 and Th17 cells likely reduced parasitemia significantly only in young mice later in infection, while the presence of reduced humoral immunity later in infection and enhanced tissue colonization by Lyme spirochetes in these mice even at the acute stage, thereby increasing inflammatory arthritis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6300717PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.02891DOI Listing

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