An ospA frame shift, identified from DNA in Lyme arthritis synovial fluid, results in an outer surface protein A that does not bind protective antibodies.
Fikrig E, Liu B, Fu LL, Das S, Smallwood JI, Flavell RA, Persing DH, Schoen RT, Barthold SW, Malawista SE. An ospA frame shift, identified from DNA in Lyme arthritis synovial fluid, results in an outer surface protein A that does not bind protective antibodies. The Journal Of Immunology 1995, 155: 5700-4. PMID: 7499856, DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.155.12.5700.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAdultAmino Acid SequenceAnimalsAntibodies, BacterialAntigens, SurfaceArthritis, InfectiousBacterial Outer Membrane ProteinsBacterial VaccinesBorrelia burgdorferi GroupFemaleFrameshift MutationHumansLipoproteinsLyme DiseaseMiceMice, Inbred C3HMolecular Sequence DataProtein BindingSynovial FluidConceptsSurface protein AOuter surface protein ASynovial fluidChronic Lyme arthritisSynovial fluid samplesSeparate time pointsImmune effectivenessLyme arthritisPassive immunizationProtective antibodiesHuman infectionsHuman AbsProtein ATime pointsNatural infectionInfectionBorrelia burgdorferiMiceOnly factorHuman hostFluid samplesOspAInfected hostHuman materialMicrobial persistence