Abstract

Mastitis is one of the major risks for public health and animal welfare in the dairy industry. Two of the most important pathogens to cause mastitis in dairy cattle are Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) and Escherichia coli (E. coli). While S. aureus generally induces a chronic and subclinical mastitis, E. coli is an important etiological pathogen resulting in an acute and clinical mastitis. The liver plays a central role in both, the metabolic and inflammatory physiology of the dairy cow, which is particularly challenged in the early lactation due to high metabolic and immunological demands. In the current study, we challenged the mammary glands of Holstein cows with S. aureus or E. coli, respectively, mimicking an early lactation infection. We compared the animals' liver transcriptomes with those of untreated controls to investigate the hepatic response of the individuals. Both, S. aureus and E. coli elicited systemic effects on the host after intramammary challenge and seemed to use pathogen-specific targeting strategies to bypass the innate immune system. The most striking result of our study is that we demonstrate for the first time that S. aureus intramammary challenge causes an immune response beyond the original local site of the mastitis. We found that in the peripheral liver tissue defined biological pathways are switched on in a coordinated manner to balance the immune response in the entire organism. TGFB1 signaling plays a crucial role in this context. Important pathways involving actin and integrin, key components of the cytoskeleton, were downregulated in the liver of S. aureus infected cows. In the hepatic transcriptome of E. coli infected cows, important components of the complement system were significantly lower expressed compared to the control cows. Notably, while S. aureus inhibits the cell signaling by Rho GTPases in the liver, E. coli switches the complement system off. Also, metabolic hepatic pathways (e.g., lipid metabolism) are affected after mammary gland challenge, demonstrating that the liver restricts metabolic tasks in favor of the predominant immune response after infection. Our results provide new insights for the infection-induced modifications of the dairy cow's hepatic transcriptome following mastitis.

Highlights

  • In times of growing consumer awareness, the delivery of highquality products from healthy animals is a high priority for animal farming and the food industry

  • A multidimensional scaling (MDS) plot represents the distribution of hepatic transcriptome data from cows having received an intramammary challenge with S. aureus and E. coli and non-challenged control samples along PC 1 and PC2 (Supplementary Image 1)

  • Single E. coli challenged animals cluster with S. aureus challenged individuals, while four animals challenged with S. aureus form an outgroup for PC1

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Summary

Introduction

In times of growing consumer awareness, the delivery of highquality products from healthy animals is a high priority for animal farming and the food industry. One major potential risk for public health and animal welfare in the dairy industry is mastitis, the infection and inflammation of the mammary gland. It is one of the most frequent and costly single-animal diseases in dairy cows [1], raises concerns in human and veterinary medicine due to potentially increasing resistance of pathogens against antimicrobial drugs [2, 3] and, if left untreated, can seriously damage the animal’s health [4]. One approach to reduce the incidence of infections in animal production is the breeding of individuals with lower susceptibility to infectious diseases [5] For this purpose, it is important to deeply phenotype the individuals for the target traits when searching for the causal background of the genetic variation. Whereas the mammary gland response to these pathogens is increasingly well understood, the consequences for peripheral tissues are less thoroughly investigated

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