2020
A human secretome library screen reveals a role for Peptidoglycan Recognition Protein 1 in Lyme borreliosis
Gupta A, Arora G, Rosen CE, Kloos Z, Cao Y, Cerny J, Sajid A, Hoornstra D, Golovchenko M, Rudenko N, Munderloh U, Hovius JW, Booth CJ, Jacobs-Wagner C, Palm NW, Ring AM, Fikrig E. A human secretome library screen reveals a role for Peptidoglycan Recognition Protein 1 in Lyme borreliosis. PLOS Pathogens 2020, 16: e1009030. PMID: 33175909, PMCID: PMC7657531, DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1009030.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPeptidoglycan recognition protein 1B. burgdorferi infectionB. burgdorferiBurgdorferi infectionHost responseLow serum IgG levelsCommon vector-borne illnessDiverse host responsesSerum IgG levelsProtein 1Vector-borne illnessImmune dysregulationIgG levelsBorreliacidal activityBurgdorferi sensu latoHuman extracellular proteinsSpirochete burdenTick biteB. burgdorferi sensu latoSpirochete Borrelia burgdorferiNervous systemLyme borreliosisLyme diseaseInfectionBorrelia burgdorferi
2012
Semaphorin 7A Contributes to West Nile Virus Pathogenesis through TGF-β1/Smad6 Signaling
Sultana H, Neelakanta G, Foellmer HG, Montgomery RR, Anderson JF, Koski RA, Medzhitov RM, Fikrig E. Semaphorin 7A Contributes to West Nile Virus Pathogenesis through TGF-β1/Smad6 Signaling. The Journal Of Immunology 2012, 189: 3150-3158. PMID: 22896629, PMCID: PMC3496209, DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1201140.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsRole of Sema7AWNV infectionSemaphorin 7ATGF-β1Lethal West Nile virus infectionViral pathogenesisBlood-brain barrier permeabilityWest Nile Virus PathogenesisWest Nile virus infectionMurine cortical neuronsPrimary human macrophagesViral burdenWNV pathogenesisCortical neuronsBarrier permeabilityFlaviviral infectionsVirus infectionVirus pathogenesisNervous systemImmune systemPathogenesisInfectionHuman macrophagesSema7AMiceIL-22 Signaling Contributes to West Nile Encephalitis Pathogenesis
Wang P, Bai F, Zenewicz LA, Dai J, Gate D, Cheng G, Yang L, Qian F, Yuan X, Montgomery RR, Flavell RA, Town T, Fikrig E. IL-22 Signaling Contributes to West Nile Encephalitis Pathogenesis. PLOS ONE 2012, 7: e44153. PMID: 22952908, PMCID: PMC3429482, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0044153.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsWild-type miceCentral nervous systemIL-22Viral loadNeutrophil migrationType miceWest Nile virus encephalitisSimilar viral loadsLethal WNV infectionIL-22 signalingHost immune responseWNV neuroinvasionVirus encephalitisCXCR2 ligandsLeukocyte infiltrateProinflammatory cytokinesChemokine receptorsImmune responseWNV infectionViral infectionNervous systemSignaling contributesExtracellular pathogensNon-redundant roleWT leukocytes
2008
ICAM-1 Participates in the Entry of West Nile Virus into the Central Nervous System
Dai J, Wang P, Bai F, Town T, Fikrig E. ICAM-1 Participates in the Entry of West Nile Virus into the Central Nervous System. Journal Of Virology 2008, 82: 4164-4168. PMID: 18256150, PMCID: PMC2292986, DOI: 10.1128/jvi.02621-07.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsWest Nile virusICAM-1Control animalsWest Nile virus neuroinvasionBlood-brain barrier leakagePathogenesis of encephalitisNile virusBlood-brain barrierLow viral loadWest Nile encephalitisCentral nervous systemICAM-1 participatesVirus neuroinvasionNeuronal damageLeukocyte infiltrationViral encephalitisViral loadBarrier leakageViral infectionNervous systemEncephalitisMiceICAMVirusAnimals
2006
Antiviral Peptides Targeting the West Nile Virus Envelope Protein
Bai F, Town T, Pradhan D, Cox J, Ashish, Ledizet M, Anderson JF, Flavell RA, Krueger JK, Koski RA, Fikrig E. Antiviral Peptides Targeting the West Nile Virus Envelope Protein. Journal Of Virology 2006, 81: 2047-2055. PMID: 17151121, PMCID: PMC1797586, DOI: 10.1128/jvi.01840-06.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsWest Nile virusMurine blood-brain barrierEnvelope proteinBlood-brain barrierPeptide 9West Nile encephalitisWNV envelope proteinCentral nervous systemWest Nile virus envelope proteinCDNA phage display libraryBrain parenchymaVirus envelope proteinHuman encephalitisViral envelope proteinsWNV infectionControl animalsPeptide-1Nervous systemRelated flavivirusesDengue virusAntiviral activityNew therapeuticsInhibition concentrationAntiviral peptidesNile virus
2003
Borrelia burgdorferi transcriptome in the central nervous system of non-human primates
Narasimhan S, Camaino M, Liang FT, Santiago F, Laskowski M, Philipp MT, Pachner AR, Radolf JD, Fikrig E. Borrelia burgdorferi transcriptome in the central nervous system of non-human primates. Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America 2003, 100: 15953-15958. PMID: 14671329, PMCID: PMC307674, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2432412100.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNon-human primate modelB. burgdorferiEffect of dexamethasoneCentral nervous systemHost metabolic pathwaysNon-human primatesNeurological symptomsPaucibacillary natureCNS milieuImmune statusCommon manifestationPrimate modelNervous systemExpression profilesLyme diseaseHost factorsHeart tissueGene expressionB. burgdorferi transcriptomeBorrelia burgdorferiNHPNeuroborreliosisImmunocompetentVivo gene expressionBurgdorferi
1997
Lyme disease in transgenic mice expressing the Borrelia burgdorferi flagellin epitope implicated in human neuroborreliosis
Fikrig E, Barthold S. Lyme disease in transgenic mice expressing the Borrelia burgdorferi flagellin epitope implicated in human neuroborreliosis. FEMS Microbiology Letters 1997, 148: 137-143. PMID: 9084140, DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-6968.1997.tb10279.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTransgenic miceAntibody responseNervous systemNon-transgenic miceFlagellin epitopeTypes of miceB. burgdorferi infectionCentral nervous systemMyelin basic proteinBurgdorferi infectionNeurologic diseaseMyelinated regionsNeuroborreliosisLyme diseaseMiceNeural tissueBorrelia burgdorferiEpitopesFlagellin antibodyInfectionDiseaseBasic proteinCarditisArthritisFusion protein