Borrelia mayonii induces carditis but not arthritis in Lyme-susceptible mice
Dawn W. Cleveland, Nivanthi Wijetunga, Timothy Casselli, Yvonne Tourand, Heidi L. Pecoraro, Catherine A. Brissette

TL;DR
This study compares how Borrelia mayonii and Borrelia burgdorferi cause disease in mice, finding that B. mayonii causes heart issues but not joint swelling.
Contribution
The study reveals that B. mayonii induces carditis but not arthritis in Lyme-susceptible mice, distinguishing it from B. burgdorferi.
Findings
B. mayonii does not cause arthritis in infected mice, unlike B. burgdorferi.
Carditis is observed in mice infected with both B. mayonii and B. burgdorferi.
B. mayonii spirochetemia in mice does not reach levels seen in human patients.
Abstract
Borrelia mayonii, a Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (Bbsl) genospecies, is a cause of Lyme disease in the upper midwestern United States. B. mayonii infection can present with some atypical clinical manifestations, including unusually high spirochetemia. Previous studies have demonstrated the infectivity of B. mayonii in laboratory mice and found evidence of widespread dissemination to internal tissues, however, did not report evidence of high spirochetemia. In the current study, we sought to directly compare spirochetemia as well as typical Lyme disease pathology including arthritis and carditis in Lyme disease-susceptible mice infected with either B. mayonii or B. burgdorferi. Immunocompetent (C3HeB/FeJ) and immunodeficient (SCID) mice were infected with B. burgdorferi or B. mayonii. Spirochetemia was measured in blood by qPCR, and pathology of hearts and joints examined. Consistent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVector-borne infectious diseases · Bartonella species infections research · Complement system in diseases
