Myeloid Differentiation Antigen 88 Deficiency Impairs Pathogen Clearance but Does Not Alter Inflammation inBorrelia burgdorferi-Infected Mice

Abstract
The spirocheteBorrelia burgdorfericauses acute inflammation in mice that resolves with the development of pathogen-specific adaptive immunity.B. burgdorferilipoproteins activate innate immune cells via Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2), but TLR2-deficient mice are not resistant toB. burgdorferi-induced disease, suggesting the involvement of other TLRs or non-TLR mechanisms in the induction of acute inflammation. For this study, we used mice that were deficient in the intracellular adapter molecule myeloid differentiation antigen 88 (MyD88), which is required for all TLR-induced inflammatory responses, to determine whether the interruption of this pathway would alterB. burgdorferi-induced disease. Infected MyD88−/−mice developed carditis and arthritis, similar to the disease in wild-type (WT) mice analyzed at its peak (days 14 and 28) and during regression (day 45). MyD88−/−macrophages produced tumor necrosis factor alpha only when spirochetes were opsonized, suggesting a role forB. burgdorferi-specific antibody in disease expression. MyD88−/−mice produced stronger pathogen-specific Th2-dependent immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) responses than did WT mice, and their IgM titers remained significantly elevated through 90 days of infection. Despite specific antibodies, the pathogen burden was 250-fold higher in MyD88−/−mice than in WT mice 45 days after infection; by 90 days of infection, the pathogen burden had diminished substantially in MyD88−/−mice, but it was still elevated compared to that in WT mice. The elevated pathogen burden may be explained in part by the finding that MyD88−/−peritoneal macrophages could ingest spirochetes but degraded them more slowly than WT macrophages. Our results show that MyD88-dependent signaling pathways are not required forB. burgdorferi-induced inflammation but are necessary for the efficient control of the pathogen burden by phagocytes.