Treponema pallidum subspecies pallidum (T. pallidum) is growing in incidence in high-income countries like the United States and remains endemic and highly prevalent in low-income countries, primarily sub-Saharan Africa, and South America. Despite being treatable, syphilis is associated with significant fetal and perinatal mortality in low-income settings, due to congenital transmission of the infection. Improving our understanding of syphilis pathogenesis, immunology, and T. pallidum biology, could result in novel measures to curtail syphilis spread, including improved diagnostics, novel therapeutics, and a preventive vaccine. We are exploring the use of a chimeric antigen, composed of a scaffolding/carrier protein of T. pallidum and a series of protective epitopes from other T. pallidum antigens previously described and patented by our laboratory, to be used as a recombinant vaccine. The first step to using this protein as a vaccine scaffolding is determining the most immunogenic sequences of the protein to be used for replacement. Specifically, we used sera from 63 patients with syphilis at different stages, and sera longitudinally collected from rabbits infected with either the Nichols or SS14 isolates of T. pallidum, which represent the model strains for the two known clades of this pathogen. Recognized amino acid sequences were then mapped to the experimentally determined Tp17 structure. Reactive epitopes in both serum groups mapped predominantly to the α-helix preceding the Tp17 soluble β-barrel and to the loops of the barrel. We are currently using the same Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) to assess reactivity levels in control sera of naive human patients. These results identify sequences of the Tp17 antigen that could be replaced by protective epitopes. Our work provides the basis for future research on the use of this scaffolding to develop a syphilis vaccine able to confer protection from this this serious infection.