Abstract
The tick-borne spirochete, Borrelia miyamotoi, is an emerging pathogen of public health significance. Current B. miyamotoi serodiagnostic testing depends on reactivity against GlpQ which is not highly sensitive on acute phase serum samples. Additionally, anti-B. miyamotoi antibodies can cross-react with C6 antigen testing for B. burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease, underscoring the need for improved serological assays that produce accurate diagnostic results. We performed an immunoproteomics analysis of B. miyamotoi proteins to identify novel serodiagnostic antigens. Sera from mice infected with B. miyamotoi by subcutaneous inoculation or tick bite were collected for immunoblotting against B. miyamotoi membrane-associated proteins separated by 2-dimensional electrophoresis (2DE). In total, 88 proteins in 40 2DE immunoreactive spots were identified via mass spectrometry. Multiple variable large proteins (Vlps) and a putative lipoprotein were among those identified and analyzed. Reactivity of anti-B. miyamotoi sera against recombinant Vlps and the putative lipoprotein confirmed their immunogenicity. Mouse anti-B. burgdorferi serum was cross-reactive to all recombinant Vlps, but not against the putative lipoprotein by IgG. Furthermore, antibodies against the recombinant putative lipoprotein were present in serum from a B. miyamotoi-infected human patient, but not a Lyme disease patient. Results presented here provide a comprehensive profile of B. miyamotoi antigens that induce the host immune response and identify a putative lipoprotein as a potentially specific antigen for B. miyamotoi serodetection.
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Introduction
The tick-borne spirochete Borrelia miyamotoi is an emergent pathogen of worldwide public health importance. Despite its phylogenetic grouping with relapsing fever Borrelia (RFB), which are transmitted by argasid (or soft) ticks, B. miyamotoi is transmitted by ixodid (or hard) tick species. In North America, vectors include Ixodes scapularis and I. pacificus, which are also hosts for the causative agent of Lyme disease (LD), Borrelia burgdorferi. Prevalence in ticks ranges from 0.02 to 10% in I. scapularis and Ixodes pacificus populations in the United States1,2,3,4. Though the true burden of B.miyamotoi disease (BMD) on human disease is still being realized, current research has estimated human prevalence to be approximately 0.84–17% among individuals parasitized by ticks1,3,5,6,7,8. Symptoms associated with BMD are often non-specific, complicating diagnosis in endemic locations with high LD incidence9,10. Furthermore, there remains a relative paucity of information regarding immunogenic characterization for B. miyamotoi infection in vertebrate hosts.
To date, sensitive and specific serology-based diagnostics for BMD are experimental, lacking in commercial validation and production. Laboratory serodiagnostics target the B. miyamotoi antigen glycerophosphodiester phosphodiesterase (GlpQ), a gene product present in RFB but absent in Lyme Borrelia. However, weak antibody response against GlpQ has been reported in a number of confirmed BMD cases, particularly acute phase serum samples5,11,12. Recent studies have suggested that serodiagnostic sensitivity for BMD can be improved by assaying GlpQ reactivity in conjunction with variable major proteins (Vmps) (i.e. variable large and small proteins)13,14. Vmps are responsible for the multiphasic antigenic variation that produces fever relapses characteristic of RFB infections15. However, antibodies produced against Vmps may be susceptible to cross-reactivity with the orthologous B. burgdorferi protein Vmp-like sequence expressed (VlsE), which comprises the sensitive C6 antigen used for LD testing16,17. A recent retrospective study highlighted that serum from 22 of 24 (91.7%) BMD-positive patients possessed cross-reactive antibodies to the C6 antigen12. Therefore, we hypothesized that a comprehensive immunoproteomic analysis of the host antibody response against B. miyamotoi infection would reveal unique antigens to augment GlpQ and Vmps for improved serodiagnostic detection of BMD.
In this study, antiserum from B. miyamotoi-infected mice applied to immunoblots of B. miyamotoi proteins separated by 2-dimensional electrophoresis (2DE) defined the immunogenic protein profile of this pathogen. Mass spectrometry was used to identify putative serum-reactive proteins leading to the identification of a novel lipoprotein antigen with the potential to differentiate BMD from LD. These analyses demonstrate considerable variability in the antibody response between mice infected via subcutaneous inoculation and tick bite, as well as across the course of infection.
Results
B. miyamotoi-infected murine hosts elicit an immune response against multiple proteins regardless of inoculation route
B. miyamotoi membrane-associated proteins were purified, fractionated by 2DE (Fig. 1), and subjected to immunoblotting with antiserum from mice infected by either needle inoculation or tick bite and sacrificed at 8 or 40 days. Proteins corresponding to the immunoreactive spots from the blots were identified by mass spectrometry. Protein identifications for each spot noted below are listed in Table 1 and corresponding raw data are located in Supplemental Table 1.
Acute IgM antibody response from needle inoculated mice at 8 days post-inoculation (dpi) resulted in two reactive spots constituting 10 protein identities: VlpC2, Vlp5, VlpD2, flagellin, a flagellar protein, GlpQ, phosphate ABC transporter substrate-binding protein, 60 kDa chaperonin, ornithine carbamoyltransferase, and phosphoglycerate kinase (Fig. 2a; Table 1). IgM immunoblotting with serum collected at 8 dpi derived from tick bite inoculation reacted with 17 immunogenic spots representing 47 protein identities (Fig. 2b; Table 1). This included immunoreactive spots number 1 and 2 which were recognized by serum at 8 dpi across both needle and tick bite inoculation routes. Identification of additional proteins recognized by mouse serum from 8 dpi via tick bite included proteins assigned the following gene ontology associations: membrane (VlpD8, VlpD9, Vlp 15/16, VlpD1, VlpD10, Vlp, and Vsp1); flagellum associated; ATPase and ATP-binding; protein binding; double-stranded RNA binding; translation associated; GTP-binding; metabolic processes; cell morphogenesis; proteolysis; transcription associated; polyamine binding; and unassigned (including uncharacterized proteins and a putative lipoprotein) (Fig. 2b; Table 1).
The largest number of immunoreactive spots was observed with sera collected at 40 dpi (IgG). Spots 1–11 and 14–17, originally detected at 8 dpi, were again observed at this time point including nine Vlps and Vsp1 (Fig. 3). Twenty-three spots were uniquely observed with sera from 40 dpi. Eight of the 23 unique spots (21, 22, 24, 25, 26, 27, 33, and 40) were detected across immunoblots probed with both needle and tick bite inoculated mouse serum of which protein identities were assigned the following gene ontology associations: membrane (multiple Vlps and Vsp1); flagellum associated; phosphoric diester hydrolase activity (GlpQ); ATPase and ATP-binding; translation associated; metabolic processes; transcription associated; polyamine binding; and unassigned (including the previously identified putative lipoprotein) (Fig. 3a,b; Table 1). The remaining 15 immunoreactive spots recognized only in serum from tick bite inoculated mice represented 47 individual proteins, 18 of which had been identified within other spots across previous data points (i.e. 8 dpi needle or tick inoculated and 40 dpi needle inoculated). Twenty-nine proteins were uniquely identified in serum collected 40 days post-tick inoculation and assigned the following gene ontology associations: flagellum associated; ATPase and ATP-binding; catalytic activity; translation associated; proteolysis; transcription associated; protein folding; chemotaxis; and unassigned (Fig. 3b; Table 1).
Immunoreactivity against recombinant B. miyamotoi Vmps and putative lipoprotein validates antigen identity
We chose a subset of 10 antigens identified through 2DE immunoblotting to express as recombinant proteins (Table 2; Supplemental Fig. 1a,b) to validate immunoreactivity against antisera used in discovery 2DE immunoblots. Proteins identified by mass spectrometry revealed an uncharacterized protein (AOW96394.1), putative lipoprotein (ALN43426.1), GlpQ, Vsp1, VlpC2, VlpD2, VlpD1, VlpD8, VlpD9, and VlpD10 as potentially antigenic proteins with serodiagnostic utility (Table 2). The amino acid sequence of each B. miyamotoi protein was aligned with corresponding amino acid sequences from B. burgdorferi and B. hermsii proteins with the highest percent identity as reported by the BLASTp database (Fig. 4). All six Vlps were grouped together and aligned against a representative B. burgdorferi and B. hermsii protein (i.e. VlsE and Vlp15/16, respectively) which demonstrated the highest amino acid percent identity to any one B. miyamotoi Vlp. Amino acid alignment comparisons between B. miyamotoi Vlps and B. burgdorferi VlsE (Accession CAH61549.1) and B. hermsii Vlp 15/16 (Accession AAB17735.1) revealed that the six B. miyamotoi Vlps displayed 36–39% amino acid sequence identity with the B. burgdorferi VlsE protein and were approximately 76–84% identical to various B. hermsii Vlps (Fig. 4a; Table 2). Vsp1 shared 46% amino acid identity to B. burgdorferi OspC (Accession AAB86545.1) and 62% to a B. hermsii variable outer membrane protein (Accession AHH04378.1) (Fig. 4b; Table 2). The B. miyamotoi putative lipoprotein amino acid sequence was 39% identical to a B. burgdorferi putative lipoprotein (Accession AAC67199.1) and 62% to an uncharacterized B. hermsii protein (Accession AHH04480.1) (Fig. 4c; Table 2). Analysis of the uncharacterized protein demonstrated the lowest percent homology of all selected proteins with 23% identity to B. burgdorferi OspC (Accession ABQ42952.1) and 50% identity to B. hermsii arthropod associated lipoprotein (Alp) (Accession GU784814.1) (Table 2)18. GlpQ had no B. burgdorferi orthologue but was 87% identical to B. hermsii GlpQ (Table 2).
The immunoreactivity of selected recombinant proteins was assessed by immunoblotting using mouse anti-B. miyamotoi sera collected at 8 and 40 dpi (Fig. 5). The IgM response in serum collected from the needle inoculated mouse at 8 dpi resulted in strong reactivity against recombinant VlpC2 (r-VlpC2) and was comparatively weak for r-putative lipoprotein, r-GlpQ, r-VlpD9, r-VlpD1, r-VlpD2, r-VlpD10, and r-VlpD8 (Fig. 5a). In contrast, all six r-Vlps were highly IgM immunoreactive with tick bite inoculated mouse antiserum (Fig. 5b). The r-uncharacterized protein and r-Vsp1 displayed no IgM reactivity with antiserum at 8 dpi regardless of inoculation route (Fig. 5a,b). Reactivity against whole cell lysates (WCL) of B. miyamotoi (LB-2001) and B. burgdorferi (B31) was observed at 8 dpi across both needle and tick inoculated sera (Fig. 5a,b).
Antibodies present at 40 dpi (IgG) recognized the entire panel of r-Vlps, independent of infection route. Reactivity against r-GlpQ was present in antiserum from needle inoculated mice, while background antibody recognition was observed in tick inoculation-derived serum (Fig. 5c,d). The r-putative lipoprotein was recognized by antiserum from both needle- and tick-inoculation. Neither r-Vsp1 nor the r-uncharacterized protein were recognized by serum at the 40 dpi time point (Fig. 5c,d). Additionally, the B. miyamotoi WCL was highly reactive against antibodies in both groups of serum samples. Recognition was observed, to a lesser extent, in the B. burgdorferi WCL (Fig. 5c,d).
Evaluation of cross-reactive anti-B. burgdorferi serum antibodies against recombinant B. miyamotoi antigens
Anti-B. burgdorferi sera from mice infected by tick bite (14 dpi) demonstrated strong cross-reactivity (IgM) with regards to all six Vlps B. miyamotoi recombinants and, to a lesser extent, r-putative lipoprotein, GlpQ, and Vsp1. No cross-reactivity was observed for the r-uncharacterized protein (Fig. 6a). IgG cross-reactivity was observed against all six recombinant Vlps with weak reactivity against Vsp1 (Fig. 6b). Both r-putative lipoprotein and r-GlpQ were negative for IgG cross-reactivity against antibodies present in the B. burgdorferi-infected murine sera (Fig. 6b). Murine sera antibodies recognized multiple proteins in the B. burgdorferi WCL and cross-reacted with multiple proteins in the B. miyamotoi WCL for both IgM and IgG (Fig. 6a,b).
Reactivity of human BMD and Lyme disease patient serum against recombinant B. miyamotoi antigens
A BMD patient serum sample blotted against recombinant antigens demonstrated IgG reactivity against all r-Vlps (VlpD9, VlpC2, VlpD1, VlpD2, VlpD10, and VlpD8), the r-putative lipoprotein, and r-GlpQ, but no reactivity against the r-uncharacterized protein or r-Vsp1 (Fig. 7a). Multi-protein reactivity was observed in the B. miyamotoi WCL but was comparatively weaker in the B. burgdorferi WCL. IgG serum antibodies from a LD patient demonstrated cross-reactivity against all r-Vlps but was absent for r-uncharacterized protein, r-GlpQ, and r-Vsp1. Significantly, there was also no cross-reactivity against the r-putative lipoprotein. Both B. burgdorferi and B. miyamotoi WCLs demonstrated reactive proteins (Fig. 7b).
Discussion
Accurate diagnosis of BMD continues to warrant greater attention as the impact on human disease burden increases. Since its emergence as a human pathogen in 2011, cases have been described across multiple continents where ticks of the Ixodes genera are present, however, approaches to generate diagnostics to distinguish B. miyamotoi infections from other borrelioses are only beginning to be investigated5,7,13,19,20,21,22. The present work took an immunoproteomic approach to compare host acute and convalescent antibody responses against B. miyamotoi infection by either needle or tick vector inoculation for the identification of novel serodiagnostic targets.
Infection in murine hosts produced differential antigen recognition patterns dependent upon infection duration (8 and 40 dpi) and inoculation route (needle vs. tick bite). IgM antibodies (8 dpi) were reactive against a number of proteins previously identified during B. miyamotoi infection including: GlpQ, Vsp1, and 9 Vlps (VlpC2, D2, D1, D8, D9, D10, 5, 15/16, and one undesignated Vlp)11,14,23. Antibody responses to multiple Vlps suggests common epitope recognition, tandem expression, or borrelial serotype switching during acute infection. Additionally, this could also be indicative of the clonality, or lack thereof, concerning strains used for infection. Borrelia miyamotoi-infected I. scapularis used in this study originated from field collection24. Consequently, murine infection may represent a non-clonal strain of B. miyamotoi, contributing to the expression of multiple Vlps, which may have important implications on observed antibody response.
GlpQ, Vsp1, and multiple Vlps were again recognized at 40 dpi, suggesting their utility as serodiagnostic targets with both IgM and IgG antibody responses. A greater number of antigens were recognized by the IgG response at 40 dpi relative to the IgM response at 8 dpi indicating the maturity of the humoral response with time. Redundancy in protein identification from these spots was prevalent; however, unique identifications included proteins grouped with cellular components, molecular functions, biological processes, and several hypothetical proteins with unclassified function (listed in Table 1).
Immunoreactive spots were more abundant in 2DE immunoblots probed with antisera from tick bite inoculated mice compared to needle inoculated mice indicative of differential protein expression profile. Alternatively, immunoreactivity against needle inoculated B. miyamotoi LB-2001 could reflect multiple passages through SCID mice prior to stable in vitro cultivation25,26,27. Although there are no direct data regarding B. miyamotoi plasmid loss or gene rearrangement upon serial passage, it has been posited as an underlying reason for gene loss in at least one study28. Plasmid content representative of the strains utilized in this study was not compared but may also play a role in the observed results. However, it has been firmly established that environmental factors such as temperature and pH, which differ in the tick versus in vitro cultivation, impact B. burgdorferi gene expression profiles providing rationale for investigations into gene regulation during tick transmission29,30,31,32,33. For example, the spots present in the immunoblots probed with antisera from tick bite inoculated mice but absent in needle inoculated mice may offer clues to determine borrelial gene products essential for survival, maintenance, and dissemination in ticks.
Assessment of various Vmps in conjunction with GlpQ to improve serodiagnosis of BMD suggests that multi-antigenic detection yields higher sensitivity and specificity14. Our data supported those findings by demonstrating recognition of r-Vlps (VlpD9, C2, D2, D10, and D8) with mouse anti-B. miyamotoi antibodies and with human BMD antiserum. However, the Vlps were similarly recognized with antisera from B. burgdorferi-infected mice and the human LD patient suggesting that serological utility of these antigens may be compromised as a reliable diagnostic tool. The observed cross-reactivity is possibly due to orthology to B. burgdorferi proteins VlsE and OspC, and is especially notable as the 6th invariant region (IVR6) of VlsE comprises the C6 antigen that is used extensively in diagnostic testing for LD16,17. It is noteworthy that both the BMD and LD patient serum used in this study were C6-positive. Indeed, recent reports have indicated that BMD patient serum samples react positively in C6 antigen testing12,34. Thus, previous or active infections with BMD or LD cannot be excluded for patient sera used in this or future studies where observable reactivity against Vlps or alternative antigens is noted.
Recombinant Vsp1 and the uncharacterized protein were not reactive against the mouse antisera used in the 2DE immunoblot discovery and, therefore, were not confirmed as immunogens in our mouse model. This result may be due to the presence of multiple overlapping non-immunogenic proteins identified within a single immunoreactive spot. The uncharacterized protein was most closely homologous to the B. hermsii Alp protein18. Like the B. miyamotoi uncharacterized protein, Alp did not elicit an antibody response in infected mice and was postulated to be associated with the tick environment. Curiously, the lack of recognition of our recombinant Vsp1 with mouse antiserum conflicted with the findings of Wagemakers et al. who described Vsp1 as an immunodominant antigen from their B. miyamotoi strain LB-2001 needle inoculated mice11. However, those investigators injected their mice with a dose of organisms 3 logs higher than that used in our study (107 vs 104) perhaps accounting for the observed differences. However, these researchers did observe Vmp switching from dominant expression of Vsp1 to VlpC2 in acute infection11. Our infection model resulted in dominant, acute expression of VlpC2, possibly due to Vmp switching brought about by differences in cultivation conditions or infection kinetics between studies. Similarly, we did not observe an anti-Vsp1 response from tick bite inoculated mice whereas the Wagemakers et al. study found that only 2 of 9 human BMD (presumably from tick bite infection) patient serum samples were positive for Vsp111. Our preliminary results demonstrated no Vsp1 reactivity in BMD or LD human sera. Though recent studies have shown its utility as a specific diagnostic marker, there could exist disparity among B. miyamotoi strains originating in North American versus Europe13. These results illustrate the complexity of differential Vmp gene expression and the corresponding role of host seroconversion dependent on inoculation route which awaits further study. Interestingly, reactivity against r-GlpQ was seen by IgG in serum from needle inoculated mice at 40 dpi, and was weakly recognized in serum from mice infected by tick inoculation. This result suggests differential upregulation between inoculation routes and/or differences in antibody responses between reservoir vs. incidental (human) hosts that warrants further investigation.
The putative lipoprotein reacted strongly against the anti-B. miyamotoi antibodies raised in both the needle and tick inoculated mice, emerging as a novel candidate serodiagnostic antigen. The putative lipoprotein has a calculated molecular mass of 35 kDa and is encoded by a gene localized to the lpD plasmid of B. miyamotoi strain LB-200126. The homologous protein in B. miyamotoi CT13-2396 has 80% amino acid identity35 and orthologs are reported in GenBank for various RFB (including B. hermsii, B. turicatae, B. crociduriae, and B. duttonii) with amino acid identities of approximately 55% with B. miyamotoi. Amino acid alignment revealed regions of identity (approximately 39%) with a B. burgdorferi putative lipoprotein. The function or role in pathogenesis of this B. miyamotoi putative lipoprotein is unknown. Preliminary data regarding the r-putative lipoprotein displayed background cross-reactivity in B. burgdorferi-infected mice via IgM, but not IgG. Lack of IgG response was also noted in our singular LD human serum. Importantly, antibody response directed against the putative lipoprotein was dominant in the BMD convalescent human serum sample, thereby, providing preliminary evidence for serological distinction between BMD and LD. Antigenic cross-reactivity with the putative lipoprotein against antibodies directed to other RFB remains to be determined. A limitation of current work includes the number of human serum samples, especially those which are of similar infection status across disease groups (i.e. LD vs. BMD) and will be the subject of future studies. Additional human serum samples from BMD, LD, and soft tick-borne RFB patients will be necessary in the appraisal of this putative lipoprotein as a serodiagnostic target.
In conclusion, we used an immunoproteomic approach to identify B. miyamotoi antigens that induce the host antibody response post-infection. Our results indicated that although Vmps are immunodominant, agreeing with other reports, antigenic cross-reactivity with anti-B. burgdorferi antibodies may be problematic. The putative lipoprotein has emerged as a potential serodiagnostic candidate to augment BMD testing with GlpQ and Vmps. Multiple proteins revealed as immunogenic in this study may aid in the development of new serodiagnostic tests for BMD.
Methods and Materials
Borrelia miyamotoi culture and mouse infections
Low passage (≤4) B. miyamotoi strain LB-200136, (kindly supplied by Joppe Hovius, Center for Experimental and Molecular Medicine, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) was cultivated at 34 °C with 5% CO2 in modified Kelly-Pettenkofer medium (MKP-F) as previously described27,37. Spirochetes were visualized using dark field microscopy and enumerated with a Cellometer (Nexcelom, Lawrence, MA). Outbred, female CD-1 mice (n = 5) (Charles River, Wilmington, MA) 6–8 weeks of age were needle inoculated subcutaneously with a 100 µl suspension of B. miyamotoi (1 × 104) in MKP-F. A separate cohort of CD-1 mice (n = 3–5) were infested with B. miyamotoi-infected I. scapularis immatures (i.e. larvae or nymphs) that originated from naturally infected female ticks collected in Minnesota that passed infection to their offspring. The tick feeding protocol was previously described38 followed by serum collection at 8 or 40 dpi. Serum from two CD-1 mice infested with nymphal B. burgdorferi (strain B31)-infected I. scapularis was collected 14 dpi and pooled. All murine infections were performed once. Animal experiments were approved and conducted in accordance with guidelines and regulations as established by the Division of Vector-Borne Diseases Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) protocol number 16–020.
Preparation of borrelial lysate for 2DE
Mid to late log-phase Borrelia were collected via centrifugation at 4000 × g for 15 min at 4 °C with approximately 2.6 × 108 spirochetes/ml used as starting material for protein preparation. Bacterial pellets were washed twice in sterile 1X PBS and stored at −80 °C prior to use. Pellets were resuspended in 10 ml of 20 mM Tris☐HCl (pH 8.0) containing 30 µg DNaseI (Thermo Scientific, Rockford, IL), 30 µg RNaseA, and 1 Complete Protease Inhibitor (PIC) tablet (Roche Applied Sciences, Indianapolis, IN). Bacterial suspension was sonicated on ice using a Branson Sonifier 450 (Branson Ultrasonics Corporation, Danbury, CT) for 60 s followed by a 60 s rest a total of ten times using the following settings: 50% duty, output-5. The cell lysate was separated from unlysed cell debris by centrifugation at 4500 × g for 20 min at 4 °C. Membrane-associated proteins were pelleted using a Sorvall WX Ultra Series ultracentrifuge (Thermo Electron Corporation) at 100,000 × g for 1 h at 4 °C resuspended in 20 mM Tris (pH 8.0) containing DNaseI, RNaseA, and PIC (as specified above), and incubated at 4 °C overnight (O/N). The protein suspension was dialyzed against 10 mM ammonium bicarbonate O/N at 4 °C in a Slide-A-Lyzer G2 cassette (Thermo Scientific, Rockford, IL) and protein concentration determined by BCA (Thermo Scientific, Rockford, IL). Protein aliquots (100 µg) were lyophilized using a Labconco Freezone 4.5 (Labconco, Kansas City, MO) and stored at −80 °C.
2DE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
Membrane-associated protein samples (100 µg) were solubilized in 8 M urea, 2 M thiourea, 60 mM DTT, 4% CHAPS, and 1% ASB-14. Ampholytes were added to a final concentration of 0.7% pH 4–7 and 0.3% pH 3–10 for pH 4–7 strips or 0.5% pH 6–9 and 0.5% pH 9–11 for pH 6–11 strips. Samples were solubilized for 72 hours at 4 °C followed by O/N application at room temperature (RT) to 7 cm pH 4–7 or pH 6–11 Immobiline dry strips (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ). Isoelectric focusing (IEF) was performed on a GE Multiphor II (GE Healthcare, Piscataway, NJ) using the following settings: 50, 100, 150, 200, 250, and 300 V for 6 minutes, 500 V for 12 minutes, and 3000 V for 5 hours. Focused strips were equilibrated for 15 minutes at RT in two sequential washes of 6 M urea, 2% SDS, 0.05 M Tris·HCl (pH), and 50% glycerol containing either 2% DTT or 2.5% iodoacetamide for respective incubations. Proteins were resolved in the second dimension using 4–12% Bis-Tris SDS-polyacrylamide gels (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA). Gels were silver stained for protein identification (Pierce Silver Stain for Mass Spectrometry, Thermo Scientific, Rockland, IL) or transferred to nitrocellulose or PVDF for immunoblotting.
Trypsin digestion and mass spectrometry
Proteins within destained gel slices were dried in a SpeedVac (Savant, Thermo Scientific, Rockland, IL) followed by resuspension in 83 ng/µl of trypsin (Promega, Madison, WI) in 0.2 M ammonium bicarbonate and incubated O/N at 37 °C. Reaction was terminated with the addition of 10% (v/v) trifluoroacetic acid (TFA). Peptides were extracted by suspending gel slices in 0.1% TFA/60% acetonitrile (ACN) (v/v), incubated at 37 °C for 40 minutes, dried via SpeedVac and identified by LC-MS/MS at the Proteomics and Metabolomics Facility, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado. Peptides (0.5 µg) were resuspended in 5% ACN/0.1% formic acid and applied to an on-line enrichment column (Waters Symmetry Trap C18 100 Å, 5 µm, 180 µm ID × 20 mm column) with chromatographic separation via reverse phase nanospray column (Waters, peptide BEH C18; 17 µm, 75 µm ID × 100 mm column, 45 °C) with a 30 minute gradient: 3–8% buffer B (0.1% formic acid in ACN) over 3 minutes followed by 8–35% buffer B over 27 minutes at a flow rate of 350 nanoliters/minute. Peptides were injected into an Orbitrap Velos mass spectrometer (Thermo Scientific, Rockford, IL) equipped with a Nanospray Flex ion source (Thermo Scientific, Rockford, IL). A m/z range of 400–2000 of spectra were gathered in positive mode ionization with a dynamic exclusion limit of 2 MS/MS spectra of a given m/z value for 30 s (exclusion duration of 90 s). For pH 6–11, ions with a charge state of +2 or +3 were accepted for MS/MS. The instrument was operated in FT mode for MS detection (resolution of 60,000) and ion trap mode for MS/MS detection with a normalized collision energy set to 35%. Resulting tandem mass spectra were extracted by ProteoWizard MsConvert (version 3.0). Spectra were searched in Mascot (Matrix Science) with a UniProt database for B. miyamotoi. No amino acid modifications were searched for proteins identified in the pH range of 4–7. For pH 6–11, oxidation of methionine and carbamidomethyl of cysteine amino acid modifications were viewed. Peptide and protein identities were viewed in Scaffold (version 4.8.7). Identities were accepted with a >90% peptide and >99% protein probability threshold and at least two unique peptides per protein identity (Supplemental Table 1). Mass spectrometry was performed for all spots at least once, with some identified twice.
Production of recombinant proteins and immunoblotting
Genes were amplified by PCR from B. miyamotoi genomic DNA (gDNA) using primers listed in Table 3, cloned into pETite N-His vector (Lucigen, Middleton, WI), and transformed into E. coli BL21 (DE3) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Recombinant proteins were expressed and purified using a QiaExpress Ni-NTA FastStart kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA) as described previously39. Proteins (100 ng/individual protein) were transferred to PVDF membranes for immunoblotting with mouse or human serum samples (1:200), followed by incubation with alkaline phosphatase conjugated goat anti-mouse or goat anti-human IgM or IgG (1:5000) with development by NBT/BCIP with similar approximated reaction times across all blots according to standard procedures. All recombinant protein immunoblots were performed twice.
Patient samples
Two human serum samples, obtained from New York Medical College, were from one patient with BMD and a second with LD. A case summary for the BMD patient has been published34. The BMD patient presented to the clinic approximately one month post-symptom onset with a history of tick exposure and two documented episodes of fever relapse. The blood sample tested from that clinic was positive by PCR for B. miyamotoi; the serum utilized in the current study was collected approximately 100 days after onset of the patient’s symptoms (i.e. 70 days after confirmation of the diagnosis by PCR). Serologic testing for LD performed at New York Medical College was positive by the whole cell sonicate (WCS) CaptiaTM Borrelia burgdorferi IgG/IgM enzyme immune assay (EIA; Trinity Biotech, Jamestown, NY) and by the C6 Lyme ELISA (Oxford Immunotec, Marlborough, MA), but negative by MarDx® B. burgdorferi IgM and IgG Marblot western blots (Trinity Biotech).
The LD patient reported tick exposure and presented to the clinic with a single erythema migrans skin lesion with duration of one day. A skin biopsy was culture and PCR-positive for B. burgdorferi. Serologic testing was performed at the CDC using the WCS EIA (Vidas Lyme IgM and IgG Polyvalent Assay, bio-Mérieux, Inc., Durham, NC), the C6 Lyme ELISA (Oxford Immunotec, Marlborough, MA) and the MarDx® B. burgdorferi IgM and IgG Marblot western blots (Trinity Biotech). The patient was positive for LD by standard two-tiered testing (C6 ELISA/IgM western blot) and by 2-EIA criteria (WCS EIA/C6 ELISA)40. Serum was collected 22 days after the patient initiated doxycycline therapy. All methods regarding human samples were approved and carried out in accordance with the guidelines and regulations set forth by the Institutional Review Board of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and New York Medical College. Both patients provided informed consent.
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Acknowledgements
The authors thank Joppe Hovius for providing the LB-2001 strain of B. miyamotoi. We thank Lars Eisen, James Carroll, and Kevin Brandt for helpful comments and suggestions. For providing technical advice and assistance, we also thank Bryna Fitzgerald and Sierra Mikula. This work was funded by the CDC as part of the official duties of the authors.
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E.K.H. and R.D.G. designed the study; E.K.H., M.R.H., M.A.M.M. and J.T.B. provided technical expertise, performed experimentation, and data analysis; N.B. provided tick-exposed murine sera; G.P.W. and C.R.M. provided clinical samples and data; and E.K.H. and R.D.G. wrote the manuscript. All co-authors edited the manuscript.
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Dr. Wormser reports receiving research grants from Immunetics, Inc., Institute for Systems Biology, Rarecyte, Inc., and Quidel Corporation. He owns equity in Abbott/AbbVie; has been an expert witness in malpractice cases involving Lyme disease; and is an unpaid board member of the American Lyme Disease Foundation. All other co-authors declare no competing interests.
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Harris, E.K., Harton, M.R., de Mello Marques, M.A. et al. Immunoproteomic analysis of Borrelia miyamotoi for the identification of serodiagnostic antigens. Sci Rep 9, 16808 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-53248-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-53248-5
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