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Microbiology 150 (2004), 549-559; DOI  10.1099/mic.0.26728-0
© 2004 Society for General Microbiology

Molecular analysis of the channel-forming protein P13 and its paralogue family 48 from different Lyme disease Borrelia species

Marija Pinne, Yngve Östberg, Pär Comstedt and Sven Bergström

Department of Molecular Biology, Umeå University, SE-901 87 Umeå, Sweden

Correspondence
Sven Bergström
sven.bergstrom{at}molbiol.umu.se

The aetiological agent of Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi cycles between its tick vector and mammalian hosts, implying that it can sense different environments and consequently change the expression of genes encoding several surface-associated proteins. The genome of the type strain B. burgdorferi B31 has revealed 175 different gene families. The p13 gene, situated on the chromosome, encodes a channel-forming protein that belongs to the gene family 48 consisting of eight additional paralogous genes. The heterogeneity of the P13 protein from different Lyme disease Borrelia strains was investigated. The predicted surface-exposed domains are the most heterogeneous regions and contain probable epitopes of P13. The membrane-spanning architecture of P13 was determined and a model for the location of this protein in the outer membrane is presented. The transcription of the paralogues of gene family 48 during in vitro culturing and in a mouse infection model was also analysed. The bba01 gene is the only p13 paralogue present in all three Lyme-disease-causing genospecies; it is stable during cultivation in vitro and the BBA01 protein was expressed in all Borrelia strains investigated. Conversely, paralogues bbi31, bbq06 and bbh41 were only detected in B. burgdorferi and the corresponding plasmids harbouring bbi31 and bbh41 were lost during in vitro passage. Finally, p13 and bbi31 are the only members of gene family 48 that are transcribed in mice, suggesting their importance during mammalian infection.


The GenBank accession numbers for the p13 nucleotide sequences determined for the Lyme disease Borrelia strains described herein are AY330920 to AY330935.




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J. Bacteriol.Home page
M. Pinne, K. Denker, E. Nilsson, R. Benz, and S. Bergstrom
The BBA01 Protein, a Member of Paralog Family 48 from Borrelia burgdorferi, Is Potentially Interchangeable with the Channel-Forming Protein P13.
J. Bacteriol., June 1, 2006; 188(12): 4207 - 4217.
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