| Literature DB >> 28265270 |
Karen E Tracy1, Nicole Baumgarth2.
Abstract
Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato species complex is capable of establishing persistent infections in a wide variety of species, particularly rodents. Infection is asymptomatic or mild in most reservoir host species, indicating successful co-evolution of the pathogen with its natural hosts. However, infected humans and other incidental hosts can develop Lyme disease, a serious inflammatory syndrome characterized by tissue inflammation of joints, heart, muscles, skin, and CNS. Although B. burgdorferi infection induces both innate and adaptive immune responses, they are ultimately ineffective in clearing the infection from reservoir hosts, leading to bacterial persistence. Here, we review some mechanisms by which B. burgdorferi evades the immune system of the rodent host, focusing in particular on the effects of innate immune mechanisms and recent findings suggesting that T-dependent B cell responses are subverted during infection. A better understanding of the mechanisms causing persistence in rodents may help to increase our understanding of the pathogenesis of Lyme disease and ultimately aid in the development of therapies that support effective clearance of the bacterial infection by the host's immune system.Entities:
Keywords: complement inhibition; germinal center; immune evasion; immune exhaustion; lyme disease; persistent infection
Year: 2017 PMID: 28265270 PMCID: PMC5316537 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1An overview diagram of factors contributing to persistence of . Shown are eight bacterial characteristics and mechanisms that B. burgdorferi may use to establish persistence in the rodent host: Spirochete shape (38, 123), antigenic variation and changes in gene expression (77, 83, 89), plasminogen binding and destruction of the extracellular matrix (52), interference with the adaptive immune response (69, 74, 75), host–pathogen co-evolution (20, 124), tick salivary protein-mediated immunosuppression (34), adhesins allowing entrance into the vasculature and tissues (49, 50), and interference with complement via CRASPs, and BBK32 (45, 60, 62, 64).
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| Immune response modulators | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Co-evolution of | Host specialization and evolution of virulence- and infectivity-associated genes | ( |
| Tick salivary proteins | Suppression of pro-inflammatory responses in the host | ( |
| Spirochete morphology and motility | Increase in | ( |
| Interactions with host tissues, contributing to dissemination and persistence | ( | |
| Host interactive proteins | Binding to host enzymes, such as plasmin/plasminogen; facilitates extracellular matrix degradation | ( |
| CRASPs | Decreased and inhibited complement activation | ( |
| Modulation of protein expression | Adaptation to host, downregulation of immunogenic proteins, and antigenic variation | ( |
| Inappropriate macrophage activation | Extracellular matrix degradation | ( |
| Antibodies with IgM-skewed isotype profile and of low affinity | Decreased antibody response quality which may contribute to persistence | (see text footnote) ( |
| Loss of demarcated T and B cell zones in secondary lymphoid tissues and collapse of germinal centers | Reduced antibody class switch recombination and somatic affinity maturation. Failure to induce long-lived plasma cells and memory B cells in a timely manner | ( |