Abstract

Intramammary infections (IMI) with Staphylococcus aureus are a common cause of bovine mastitis and can result in both clinical (CM) or subclinical mastitis (SCM). Although bacterial isolates of S. aureus differ in their virulence potential it is largely unclear which bacterial virulence factors are responsible for increased clinical severity. We performed a genome wide association study and used a generalized linear mixed model to investigate the correlation between gene carriage, lineage and clinical outcome of IMI in a collection of S. aureus isolates from cattle with CM (n = 125) and SCM (n = 151) from 11 European countries. An additional aim was to describe the genetic variation of bovine S. aureus in Europa. The dominant lineages in our collection were clonal complex (CC) 151 (81/276, 29.3%), CC97 (54/276, 19.6%), CC479 (32/276, 11.6%) and CC398 (19/276, 6.9%). Virulence and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) gene carriage was highly associated with CC. Among a selection of nine virulence and AMR genes, CC151, CC479 and CC133 carried more virulence genes than other CCs, and CC398 was associated with AMR gene carriage. Whereas CC151, CC97 were widespread in Europe, CC479, CC398 and CC8 were only found in specific countries. Compared to CC151, CC479 was associated with CM rather than SCM (OR 3.62; 95% CI 1.38–9.50) and the other CCs were not. Multiple genes were associated with CM, but due to the clustering within CC of carriage of these genes, it was not possible to differentiate between the effect of gene carriage and CC on clinical outcome of IMI. Nevertheless, this study demonstrates that characterization of S. aureus CC and virulence genes helps to predict the likelihood of the occurrence of CM following S. aureus IMI and highlights the potential benefit of diagnostics tools to identify S. aureus CC during bovine mastitis.

Highlights

  • Intramammary infections (IMI) with Staphylococcus aureus are a common cause of bovine mastitis and can result in both clinical (CM) or subclinical mastitis (SCM)

  • After selection of isolates and quality control of whole-genome sequencing (WGS) results, 276 genomes were available of S. aureus isolates obtained from bovine mastitis cases originating from 254 unique herds in eleven different European countries

  • We found CC479 to be strongly associated with CM rather than with SCM cases

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Summary

Introduction

Intramammary infections (IMI) with Staphylococcus aureus are a common cause of bovine mastitis and can result in both clinical (CM) or subclinical mastitis (SCM). We performed a genome wide association study and used a generalized linear mixed model to investigate the correlation between gene carriage, lineage and clinical outcome of IMI in a collection of S. aureus isolates from cattle with CM (n = 125) and SCM (n = 151) from 11 European countries. A large number of virulence genes have been identified in S. aureus isolates obtained from bovine mastitis cases, several of which are involved in evasion of the host immune response during ­infection[8,9]. Several studies investigated CCs and virulence/AMR gene carriage among bovine S. aureus isolates responsible for I­ MI6,9,19, but only few directly compare isolates from CM and SCM cases. Carriage of certain genes (lukM-lukF′, seO) was overrepresented among CM isolates compared to SCM i­solates[21,22] This suggests that some S. aureus lineages are more likely to cause CM than others. In this study we performed whole-genome sequencing (WGS) of 276 S. aureus isolates from cattle with CM or SCM in 11 European countries

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