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Feeding of Ticks on Animals for Transmission and Xenodiagnosis in Lyme Disease Research
Authors:Monica E Embers  Britton J Grasperge  Mary B Jacobs  Mario T Philipp
Institution:1.Division of Bacteriology & Parasitology, Tulane National Primate Research Center, Tulane University Health Sciences Center
Abstract:Transmission of the etiologic agent of Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi, occurs by the attachment and blood feeding of Ixodes species ticks on mammalian hosts. In nature, this zoonotic bacterial pathogen may use a variety of reservoir hosts, but the white-footed mouse (Peromyscus leucopus) is the primary reservoir for larval and nymphal ticks in North America. Humans are incidental hosts most frequently infected with B. burgdorferi by the bite of ticks in the nymphal stage. B. burgdorferi adapts to its hosts throughout the enzootic cycle, so the ability to explore the functions of these spirochetes and their effects on mammalian hosts requires the use of tick feeding. In addition, the technique of xenodiagnosis (using the natural vector for detection and recovery of an infectious agent) has been useful in studies of cryptic infection. In order to obtain nymphal ticks that harbor B. burgdorferi, ticks are fed live spirochetes in culture through capillary tubes. Two animal models, mice and nonhuman primates, are most commonly used for Lyme disease studies involving tick feeding. We demonstrate the methods by which these ticks can be fed upon, and recovered from animals for either infection or xenodiagnosis.
Keywords:Infection  Issue 78  Medicine  Immunology  Infectious Diseases  Biomedical Engineering  Primates  Muridae  Ticks  Borrelia  Borrelia Infections    Ixodes  ticks  Lyme disease  xenodiagnosis    Borrelia    burgdorferi  mice  nonhuman primates  animal model
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