posted on 2023-05-17, 12:18authored bySmith, RP, Muzaffar, SB, Jennifer Lavers, Lacombe, EH, Cahill, BK, Lubelczyk, CB, Kinsler, A, Mathers, AJ, Rand, PW
Borrelia garinii is the most neurotropic of the genospecies of B. burgdorferi sensu lato that cause Lyme disease in Europe, where it is transmitted to avian and mammalian reservoir hosts and to humans by Ixodes ricinus. B. garinii is also maintained in an enzootic cycle in seabirds by I. uriae, a tick found at high latitudes in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. To determine whether B. garinii is present in seabird ticks on the Atlantic Coast of North America, we examined 261 I. uriae ticks by polyclonal antiborrelial fluorescent antibody. Ten of 61 ticks from Gull Island, Newfoundland, were positive for borreliae by this screen. Amplicons of DNA obtained by PCR that targeted the B. garinii rrs-rrla intergenic spacer were sequenced and matched to GenBank sequences for B. garinii. The potential for introduction of this agent into the North American Lyme disease enzootic is unknown.
History
Publication title
Emerging Infectious Diseases (Print Edition)
Volume
12
Issue
12
Pagination
1909-1912
ISSN
1080-6040
Department/School
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
Publisher
Center Disease Control
Place of publication
Atlanta, USA, Ga, 30333
Rights statement
Copyright 2006 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention