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Streptococcus uberis strains isolated from the bovine mammary gland evade immune recognition by mammary epithelial cells, but not of macrophages

G�nther, Juliane; Czabanska, Anna; Bauer, Isabel; Leigh, James A.; Holst, Otto; Seyfert, Hans-Martin

Streptococcus uberis strains isolated from the bovine mammary gland evade immune recognition by mammary epithelial cells, but not of macrophages Thumbnail


Authors

Juliane G�nther

Anna Czabanska

Isabel Bauer

Otto Holst

Hans-Martin Seyfert



Abstract

Streptococcus uberis is frequently isolated from the mammary gland of dairy cattle. Infection with some strains can induce mild subclinical inflammation whilst others induce severe inflammation and clinical mastitis. We compared here the inflammatory response of primary cultures of bovine mammary epithelial cells (pbMEC) towards S. uberis strains collected from clinical or subclinical cases (seven strains each) of mastitis with the strong response elicited by Escherichia coli. Neither heat inactivated nor live S. uberis induced the expression of 10 key immune genes (including TNF, IL1B, IL6). The widely used virulent strain 0140J and the avirulent strain, EF20 elicited similar responses; as did mutants defective in capsule (hasA) or biofilm formation (sub0538 and sub0539). Streptococcus uberis failed to activate NF-?B in pbMEC or TLR2 in HEK293 cells, indicating that S. uberis particles did not induce any TLR-signaling in MEC. However, preparations of lipoteichoic acid (LTA) from two strains strongly induced immune gene expression and activated NF-?B in pbMEC, without the involvement of TLR2. The immune-stimulatory LTA must be arranged in the intact S. uberis such that it is unrecognizable by the relevant pathogen receptors of the MEC. The absence of immune recognition is specific for MEC, since the same S. uberis preparations strongly induced immune gene expression and NF-?B activity in the murine macrophage model cell RAW264.7. Hence, the sluggish immune response of MEC and not of professional immune cells to this pathogen may aid establishment of the often encountered belated and subclinical phenotype of S. uberis mastitis.

Citation

Günther, J., Czabanska, A., Bauer, I., Leigh, J. A., Holst, O., & Seyfert, H. (2016). Streptococcus uberis strains isolated from the bovine mammary gland evade immune recognition by mammary epithelial cells, but not of macrophages. Veterinary Research, 47(13), https://doi.org/10.1186/s13567-015-0287-8

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 27, 2015
Publication Date Jan 7, 2016
Deposit Date Oct 31, 2016
Publicly Available Date Oct 31, 2016
Journal Veterinary Research
Print ISSN 0928-4249
Electronic ISSN 1297-9716
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 47
Issue 13
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s13567-015-0287-8
Keywords Mastitis; Streptococcus; Innate immunity; Bovine; Macrophage
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/773371
Publisher URL http://veterinaryresearch.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13567-015-0287-8

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