B. burgdorferi circulates between Ixodes ticks and a vertebrate host in an enzootic cycle. B. burgdorferi living in a tick cannot be passed to its offspring. Therefore, tick larvae must feed on the blood of an infected animal to acquire B. burgdorferi, which ends up in the midgut. The spirochetes survive as the larvae molts into a nymph and persist in the nutrient-poor midgut as the nymph overwinters. Infected nymphs then transmit B. burgdorferi by feeding on another vertebrate to complete the cycle. Ticks can transmit B. burgdorferi to humans, but humans are dead-end hosts, unlikely to continue the life cycle of the spirochete.[ Nymphs molt into adult ticks, which usually feed on larger mammals that are not able to support the survival of B. burgdorferi.
Organism species: Homo sapiens (Human)
CATALOG NO. | PRODUCT NAME | APPLICATIONS | |
Antibodies | n/a | Monoclonal Antibody to Borrelia Burgdorferi (BB) | Monoclonal Antibody Customized Service Offer |
n/a | Polyclonal Antibody to Borrelia Burgdorferi (BB) | Polyclonal Antibody Customized Service Offer | |
Assay Kits | n/a | CLIA Kit for Borrelia Burgdorferi (BB) | CLIA Kit Customized Service Offer |
n/a | ELISA Kit for Borrelia Burgdorferi (BB) | ELISA Kit Customized Service Offer |