| Literature DB >> 23407755 |
Monica E Embers1, Sukanya Narasimhan.
Abstract
Lyme borreliosis is a zoonotic disease caused by Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato bacteria transmitted to humans and domestic animals by the bite of an Ixodes spp. tick (deer tick). Despite improvements in diagnostic tests and public awareness of Lyme disease, the reported cases have increased over the past decade to approximately 30,000 per year. Limitations and failed public acceptance of a human vaccine, comprised of the outer surface A (OspA) lipoprotein of B. burgdorferi, led to its demise, yet current research has opened doors to new strategies for protection against Lyme disease. In this review we discuss the enzootic cycle of B. burgdorferi, and the unique opportunities it poses to block infection or transmission at different levels. We present the correlates of protection for this infectious disease, the pros and cons of past vaccination strategies, and new paradigms for future vaccine design that would include elements of both the vector and the pathogen.Entities:
Keywords: Borrelia burgdorferi; Ixodes scapularis; Lyme disease; reservoir; tick; vaccine; vector
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23407755 PMCID: PMC3569838 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2013.00006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Points at which interruption of .
Prospective Lyme vaccine antigens from .
| OspA | Antibody-mediated, transmission-blocking | Challenge of mice by injection, tissue transplant and tick transmission; challenge of monkeys by tick transmission | Efficacious, dependent upon antibody titer | Fikrig et al., |
| OspB | Antibody-mediated; elicits bactericidal antibodies | Active and passive protection against injection challenge | Potential for strain-dependent efficacy, due to truncations of OspB proteins in some strains | Fikrig et al., |
| OspC | Antibody-mediated, within host | Challenge of mice by injection and tick transmission | Effective, but with minimal cross-species protection; failure to elicit long-term (anamnestic) response | Probert and Lefebvre, |
| DbpA | Antibody-mediated, within host | Challenge of mice by injection and tick transmission | Protective against injected, but not tick-transmitted infection | Hanson et al., |
| Bbk32 (p35) | Antibody-mediated, within tick | Passive immunization against injection and tick challenge | Efficacy in combination with DbpA and OspC against challenge by injection but not singly | Fikrig et al., |
Positive and negative characteristics of the OspA vaccine.
| Blocks transmission; easier to test for efficacy | Required maintenance of high antibody titers for efficacy (multiple boosts) |
| Subunit; does not interfere with immunodiagnosis | Some adverse reactions, potential for inducing autoimmunity |
| Targets a reasonably conserved protein within species | Not effective against other tick-borne diseases |
Figure 2Nymphs feeding on: (A) naïve guinea pig shows no redness at the tick bite-sites and (B) repeatedly tick-infested guinea pig shows increased redness around the tick bite-site within 24 h of tick attachment.
Figure 3Temporally changing composition of tick saliva spit into the host skin. Schematic representation of the dynamic tick saliva. Ixodes scapularis engorge on vertebrate host skin for 3–7 days spitting saliva into the host dermis at the bite-site. Salivary composition potentially changes during feeding to confront the different host defense responses.