Abstract
BackgroundThe most important disease of dairy cattle is mastitis, caused by the infection of the mammary gland by various micro-organisms. Although the transcriptional response of bovine mammary gland cells to in vitro infection has been studied, the interplay and consequences of these responses in the in vivo environment of the mammary gland are less clear. Previously mammary gland quarters were considered to be unaffected by events occurring in neighbouring quarters. More recently infection of individual quarters with mastitis causing pathogens, especially Escherichia coli, has been shown to influence the physiology of neighbouring uninfected quarters. Therefore, the transcriptional responses of uninfected mammary gland quarters adjacent to quarters infected with two major mastitis causing pathogens, E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus, were compared.ResultsThe bacteriologically sterile, within-animal control quarters exhibited a transcriptional response to the infection of neighbouring quarters. The greatest response was associated with E. coli infection, while a weaker, yet significant, response occurred during S. aureus infection. The transcriptional responses of these uninfected quarters included the enhanced expression of many genes previously associated with mammary gland infections. Comparison of the transcriptional response of uninfected quarters to S. aureus and E. coli infection identified 187 differentially expressed genes, which were particularly associated with cellular responses, e.g. response to stress. The most affected network identified by Ingenuity Pathway analysis has the immunosuppressor transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGFB1) at its hub and largely consists of genes more highly expressed in control quarters from S. aureus infected cows.ConclusionsUninfected mammary gland quarters reacted to the infection of neighbouring quarters and the responses were dependent on pathogen type. Therefore, bovine udder quarters exhibit interdependence and should not be considered as separate functional entities. This suggests that mastitis pathogens not only interact directly with host mammary cells, but also influence discrete sites some distance away, which will affect their response to the subsequent spread of the infection. Understanding the underlying mechanisms may provide further clues for ways to control mammary gland infections. These results also have implications for the design of experimental studies investigating immune regulatory mechanisms in the bovine mammary gland.
Highlights
The most important disease of dairy cattle is mastitis, caused by the infection of the mammary gland by various micro-organisms
Microarray analysis of the transcriptional response of the bovine mammary gland to E. coli and S. aureus infection A strictly defined model for E. coli- and S. aureusinduced mastitis was developed involving the sequential infection of three udder quarters whilst the fourth quarter acted as a control [10]
The intramammary transcriptional response to E. coli and S. aureus infection was investigated by comparing the expression of genes in infected quarters with those expressed in the uninfected, within animal control quarters
Summary
The most important disease of dairy cattle is mastitis, caused by the infection of the mammary gland by various micro-organisms. The transcriptional responses of uninfected mammary gland quarters adjacent to quarters infected with two major mastitis causing pathogens, E. coli and Staphylococcus aureus, were compared. Several studies have used microarrays to investigate the bovine mammary gland response to infection with particular bacteria, including E. coli [3,4], Streptococcus uberis [5,6] and S. aureus [7]. The meta-analysis reported by Genini et al [8] identified a common transcriptional response in the mammary glands of several species to different pathogens and identified several new pathways not previously identified in the individual studies. We designed an infection study to investigate and compare the early transcriptional response of the bovine mammary gland to challenge with S. aureus and E. coli using a single microarray platform
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