Jiang et al., “Cross-antigenicity between the major surface proteins (ospA and ospB) and other proteins of Borrelia burdorferi,” J. Immun., 144(1):284-289, 1990. |
Kalish, “Lyme Disease,” Infect. Arthritis, 19(2):399-426, 1993. |
Karlsson, “Western immunoblot and flagellum enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for serodiagnosis of lyme borreliosis,” J. Clin. Microbiol., 28(9):2148-2150, 1990. |
Kitten and Barbour, “Juxtaposition of expressed variable antigen genes with a conserved telomere in the bacterium Borrelia hermsii,” Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 87:6077-6081, 1990. |
Kitten et al., “Intragenic recombination and a chimeric outer membrane protein in the relapsing fever agent Borrelia hermsii,” J. Bacteriol., 175(9):2516-2522, 1993. |
LeFebver et al., “Characterization of Borrelia burgdorferi isolates by restriction endonculease analysis and DNA hybridization,” Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 27(4):636-639, 1989. |
Luft et al., Biochemical and Immunological characterization of the surface proteins of Borrelia burgdorferi, Infect. Immun., 57(11):3637-3645, 1989. |
Margolis et al., “Homology between Borrelia burgdorferi OspC and members of the family of Borrelia hermsii variable major proteins,” Gene, 143:105-110, 1994. |
Moody et al., “Lyme borreliosis in laboratory animals: effect of host species and in vitro passage of Borrelia burgdorferi,” Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 43(1):87-92, 1990. |
Norris et al., “Comparison of protein and fatty acid profiles of low- and high-passage strains of Borrelia burgdorferi,” Annual Meeting American Soc. Microbiol., 90(0):103, Abstract D-135, 1990. |
Norris et al., “High- and low-infectivity pheontypes of clonal populations of in vitro-cultured Borrelia burgdorferi,” Infect. Immun., 63:2206-2212, 1995. |
Norris et al., “Low-passage-associated proteins of Borrelia burgdorferi B31: characterization and molecular cloning of OspD, a surface-exposed, plasmid-encoded lipoprotein,” Infect. Immun., 60:4662-4672, 1992. |
Persing et al., “Genetic stability of Borrelia burgdorferi recovered from chronically infected immunocompetent mice,” Infect. Immun., 62:3521-3527, 1994. |
Plasterk et al., “Transposition of structural genes to an expression sequence on a linear plasmid causes antigenic variation in the Bacterium Borrelia hermsii,” Nature, 318:257-263, 1985. |
Restrepo and Barbour, “Antigen diversity in the bacterium B. hermsii through ‘somatic’ mutations in rearranged vmp genes,” Cell, 78:867-876, 1994. |
Restrepo et al., “Activation of a vmp pseudogene in Borrelia hermsii: an alternate mechanism of antigenic variation during relapsing fever,” Mol. Microbiol., 13:287-299, 1994. |
Restrepo et al., “Subtelomeric expression regions of Borrelia hermsii linear plasmids are highly polymorphic,” Mol. Microbiol., 6:3299-3311, 1992. |
Sadziene et al., “Borrelia burgdorferi mutant lacking sop: biological and immunological characterization,” Infection and Immunity, 63(4):1573-1580, 1995. |
Schutzer et al., “Sequestration of antibody to Borrelia burgdorferi in immune complexes in seronegative Lyme disease,” Lancet., 335:312-315, 1990. |
Schwan and Simpson, “Factors influencing the antigenic reactivity of Borrelia burgdorferi the lyme disease spirochete,” Scand. J. Infect. Dis., 77:94-101, 1991. |
Schwan et al., “Changes in antigenic reactivity of Borrelia burgdorferi the lyme disease spirochete, during persistent infection in mice,” Can. J. Microbiol., 37:450-454, 1991. |
Scriba et al., “The 39-kilodalton protein of Borrelia burgdorferi: a target for bactericidal human monocloanl antibodies,” Infect. Immun., 61(10):4523-4526, 1993. |
Simpson et al., “Reactivity of human lyme borreliosis sera with a 39-kilodalton antigen specific to Borrelia burgdorferi,” J. Clin. Microbiol., 28(6):1329-1337, 1990. |
Simpson et al., “Antibody to a 39-kilodalton Borrelia burgdorferi antigen (P39) as a marker for infection in experimentally and naturally innoculated animals,” J. Clinical Microb., 29(2):236-243, 1991. |
Steere, “Medical progress. Lyme disease,” New England J. Med., 321(9):586-596, 1989. |
Stevenson et al., “Expression and gene sequence of outer surface protein C of Borrelia burgdorferi reisolated from chronically infected mcie,” Infect. Immun., 62:3568-3571, 1994. |
Szczepanski and Benach, “Lyme borreliosis: host responses to Borrelia burgdorferi,” Microb. Rev., 55(1):21-34, 1991. |
Thiessen et al., “Evolution of the Borrelia burgdorferi outer surface protein OspC,” J. Bacteriol., 177:3036-3044, 1995. |
Wallich et al., “The Borrelia burgdorferi flagellum-associated 41-kilodalton antigen (flagellin): molecular cloning, expression and amplification of the gene,” Infect. Immun., 58(6):1711-1719, 1990. |
Wilske et al., “Antigenic variation and strain heterogeneity in Borrelia spp,” Res. Microbiol., 143:583-596, 1992. |
Wise and Weaver, “Detection of the lyme disease bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, by using the polymerase chain reaction and a nonradioisotopic gene probe,” Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 29(7):1523-1526, 1991. |
Written Opinion dated Mar. 10, 1998 (PCT/US97/02952) (UTFH:234P). |
Zhang et al., “Antigenic variation in lyme disease borreliae by promiscuous recombination of VMP-like sequence cassettes,” Cell, 89:275-285, 1997. |
Liang et al., “An immunodominant conserved region within the variable domain of VlsE, the variable surface antigen of Borrelia burgdorferi,” J. Immunology, 163:5566-5573, 1999. |
Liang et al., “Characterization of a Borrelia burgdorferi VlsE invariable region useful in canine lyme disease serodiagnosis by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay,” J. Clinical Microbiology, 38(11):4160-4166, 2000. |
Liang et al., “Sensitive and specific serodiagnosis of lyme disease by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with a peptide based on an immunodominant conserved region of Borrelia burgdorferi VlsE,” J. Clinical Microbiology, 37(12):3990-3996, 1999. |
Balmelii and Piffatetti, “Analysis of the genetic polymorphism of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato by multilocus enzyme electrophoresis,” Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol., 46:167-172, 1996. |
Barbour and Garon, “Linear plasmids of the bacterium Borrelia burdorferi have covalently closed ends,” Science, 237:409-411, 1987. |
Barbour et al., “Structural analysis of the variable major proteins of Borrelia hermsii,” J. Exp. Med., 158:2127-2140, 1983. |
Barbour et al., “Tandem insertion sequence-like elements define the expression site for variable antigen genes of Borrelia hermsii,” Infect. Immun., 59:390-397, 1991. |
Barbour et al., “Variable antigen genes of the relapsing fever agent Borrelia hermsii are activated by promoter addition,” Mol. Microbiol., 5:489-493, 1991. |
Barbour et al., “Variable major proteins of Borrelia hermsii,” J. Exp. Med., 156:1312-1324, 1982. |
Barbour, “Immunochemical analysis of Lyme disease spirochetes,” Yale J. Biomed., 57:581-586, 1984. |
Barbour, “Plasmid analysis of Borrelia burdorferi, the Lyme disease agent,” J. Clin. Microbiol., 26(3):475-478, 1988. |
Barstad et al., “Variable major proteins of Borrelia hermsii. Epitope mapping and partial sequence analysis of CNBr peptides,” J. Exp. Med., 161:1302-1314, 1985. |
Benach et al., “A murine IgM monoclonal antibody binds an antigenic determinant in outer surface protein A, an immunodominant basic protein of the lyme disease spirochete,” The Journal of Immunology, 140:265-272, 1988. |
Berg et al., “The laboratory diagnosis of lyme disease,” Arch. Dermatol., 127:866-870, 1991. |
Borenstein et al., “Evidence for surface exposure of a 29kDa Borrelia burdorferi antigen,” Abstracts of the Annual Meeting of American Soc. Microbiol., 90(0):46, Abstract B-116, 1990. |
Brandt et al. “Immunogenic integral membrane proteins of Borrelia burdorferi are lipoproteins,” Infect. Immun., 58(4):983-991, 1990. |
Burman et al., “The variable antigens Vmp7 and Vmp21 of the relapsing fever bacterium Borrelia hermsii are structurally analogous to the VSG proteins of the African trypanosome,” Molecular Mocrobiology, 4(10);1715-1726, 1990. |
Carroll and Gheradini, “Membrane protein variations associated with in vitro passage of Borrelia burdorferi,” Infect. Immun., 64:392-398, 1996. |
Carter et al., “A family of surface-exposed proteins of 20 kilodaltons in the genus Borrelia,” Infect. Immun., 62:2792-2799, 1994. |
Casjens et al., “Linear chromosomes of Lyme disease agent spirochetes: genetic diversity and conservation of gene order,” J. Bacteriol., 177:2769-2780, 1995. |
Cluss and Boothby, “Thermoregulation of protein synthesis in Borrelia burdorferi,” Infect. Immun., 58(4):1038-1042, 1990. |
Cunningham et al., Ann. NY Acad. Sci, 539:376-378, 1988. |
Dialog Search Report. |
Donelson, “Mechanisms of antigenic variation in Borrelia hermsii and African trypanosomes,” J. Biol. Chem., 270:7783-7786, 1995. |
Fawcett et al., “Detection of antibodies to the recombinant p39 protein of Borrelia burdorferi using enzyme immunoassay and immunoblotting,” J. Rheumatology, 20(4):734-738, 1993. |
Grodzicki and Steere, “Comparison of immunoblotting and indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay using different antigen preparations for diagnosing early lyme disease,” J. Infect. Dis., 157(4):790-797, 1988. |
Howe et al., “A single recombinant plasmid expressing two major outer surface proteins of the lyme disease spirochete,” Science, 227:645-646, 1985. |
Howe et al., “Organization of genes encoding two outer membrane proteins of the lyme disease agent Borrelia burdorferi within a single transcriptional unit,” Infect. Immun., 54:207-212, 1986. |
Hyde et al., “Detection of antigens in urine of mice and humans infected with Borrelia burdorferi, etiologic agent of lyme disease,” Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 27(1):58-61, 1989. |
International Search Report dated Jan. 21, 1995.(PCT/US94/10729) (UTFH:195P). |
International Search Report dated Jan. 26, 1993.(PCT/US92/09145) (UTFH:162P). |
International Search Report dated Jul. 25, 1997.(PCT/US97/02952) (UTFH:234P). |
GenBank Accession No. AAB09432. |
GenBank Accession No. AAB17737. |
GenBank Accession No. AAC45733. |