Abstract

A recombinant Borrelia burgdorferi flagellin protein expressed in Escherichia coli is bound by a murine monoclonal antiflagellin antibody (H9724) and by antibodies in the sera of patients with Lyme disease. Immunoreactive epitopes on the flagellar protein were identified by immunoblot analysis of antibody binding to expressed truncated flagellar proteins. The epitope recognized by the murine monoclonal antibody is within the central heterologous region of the flagellar protein (amino acids 90 to 266). However, antiflagellin antibodies in the sera of patients with Lyme arthritis bound an epitope entirely within, or whose conformation was partly formed by, the 90 NH2-terminal amino acids of the flagellar protein. The binding of antibodies in the sera of patients with Lyme arthritis to the NH2-terminal region of the flagellar protein, a region with sequence homology to the flagellar proteins of other bacterial species, suggests the possibility that antigenic mimicry contributes to the immunopathogenesis of Lyme disease. The fact that human antibodies bind to a highly conserved and hence shared portion of the flagellin reduces the specificity of serological assays for the diagnosis of Lyme disease which use the flagellar protein as antigen.

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