Abstract
In order to clear the body of infecting spirochetes, phagocytic cells must be able to get hold of them. In real-time phase-contrast videomicroscopy we were able to measure the speed of Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), the Lyme spirochete, moving back and forth across a platelet to which it was tethered. Its mean crossing speed was 1,636 μ/ min (N = 28), maximum, 2800 μ/min (N = 3). This is the fastes speed recorded for a spirochete, and upward of two orders of magnitude above the speed of a human neutrophil, the fastest cell in the body. This alacrity and its interpretation, in an organism with bidirectional motor capacity, may well contribute to difficulties in spirochete clearance by the host. © 2008 Malawista, de Boisfleury Chevance.
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CITATION STYLE
Malawista, S. E., & de Boisfleury Chevance, A. (2008). Clocking the Lyme spirochete. PLoS ONE, 3(2). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001633
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