Abstract

Simple SummaryStaphylococcus aureus is not only a common cause of bovine mastitis, but also an agent of food poisoning in humans. S. aureus has the ability to produce branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) under certain nutritional conditions. We show that levels of two BCCA (leucine and isoleucine) are correlated to the load of S. aureus in composite milk samples. The application of the ANOVA and Tukey-Kramer analysis showed statistically significant differences in the content of the BCAAs, isoleucine and leucine, between the two groups based on S. aureus positivity (p < 0.001), while bivariate Pearson correlation analysis showed a strong relationship between S. aureus load and the content of these two BCAAs.The early diagnosis of mastitis is an essential factor for the prompt detection of the animal for further actions. In fact, if not culled, infected cows must be segregated from the milking herd and milked last, or milked with separate milking units. Besides microbiological analysis, the somatic cell count (SCC) commonly used as predictor of intramammary infection, frequently lead to a misclassification of milk samples. To overcome these limitations, more specific biomarkers are continuously evaluated. The total amino acid content increases significantly in mastitic milk compared to normal milk. S. aureus requires branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs—isoleucine, leucine, and valine) for protein synthesis, branched-chain fatty acids synthesis, and environmental adaptation by responding to their availability via transcriptional regulators. The increase of BCAAs in composite milk has been postulated to be linked to mammary infection by S. aureus. The aim of this work is to demonstrate, by a direct ion-pairing reversed-phase method, based on the use of the evaporative light-scattering detector (IP-RP-HPLC-ELSD), applied to 65 composite cow milk samples, a correlation between the concentration of isoleucine and leucine, and S. aureus load. The correlation coefficient, r, was found to be 0.102 for SCC (p = 0.096), 0.622 for isoleucine (p < 0.0001), 0.586 for leucine (p < 0.0001), 0.013 for valine (p = 0.381), and 0.07 for tyrosine (p = 0.034), standing for a positive correlation between S. aureus and isoleucine and leucine concentration. The link between the content of BCAAs, isoleucine and leucine, and udder infection by S. aureus demonstrated with our study has an important clinical value for the rapid diagnosis of S. aureus mastitis in cows.

Highlights

  • Staphylococcus aureus causes one of the most common types of chronic mastitis in cows

  • S. aureus mastitis comes with widespread metabolic perturbations and the branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) appear to be

  • S.Leucine aureus load and theobserved content of two suggesting that they are suitable as biomarkers for the diagnosis of subclinical mastitis caused by

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Summary

Introduction

Staphylococcus aureus causes one of the most common types of chronic mastitis in cows. Though some cows may show signs of clinical mastitis (especially after calving), the infection is usually subclinical, often with no detectable changes in milk or the udder. It is well known that it is hard to eradicate the presence of S. aureus by using standard milking-time hygiene techniques in herds with low levels of SCC (

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