Lyme Disease Agent Reservoirs Peromyscus leucopus and P. maniculatus Have Natively Inactivated Genes for the High-Affinity Immunoglobulin Gamma Fc Receptor I (CD64)

Alan G. Barbour, Jonathan V. Duong,Anthony D. Long

PATHOGENS(2023)

引用 1|浏览4
暂无评分
摘要
The abundant and widely distributed deermice Peromyscus leucopus and P. maniculatus are important reservoirs for several different zoonotic agents in North America. For the pathogens they persistently harbor, these species are also examples of the phenomenon of infection tolerance. In the present study a prior observation of absent expression of the high-affinity Fc immunoglobulin gamma receptor I (Fc?RI), or CD64, in P. leucopus was confirmed in an experimental infection with Borreliella burgdorferi, a Lyme disease agent. We demonstrate that the null phenotype is attributable to a long-standing inactivation of the Fcgr1 gene in both species by a deletion of the promoter and coding sequence for the signal peptide for Fc?RI. The Fcgr1 pseudogene was also documented in the related species P. polionotus. Six other Peromyscus species, including P. californicus, have coding sequences for a full-length Fc?RI, including a consensus signal peptide. An inference from reported phenotypes for null Fcgr1 mutations engineered in Mus musculus is that one consequence of pseudogenization of Fcgr1 is comparatively less inflammation during infection than in animals, including humans, with undisrupted, fully active genes.
更多
查看译文
关键词
tick-borne disease, Cricetidae, retroelement, zoonosis, Fc receptor, deer mouse
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要