13 Ergebnisse
Clinical mastitis (CM), the most prevalent and costly disease in dairy cows, is diagnosed most commonly shortly after calving. Current indicators do not satisfactorily predict CM. This study aimed to develop a robust and comprehensive mass spectrometry-based metabolomic and lipidomic workflow using
Candida albicans strains with a deletion of the mitogen-activated protein kinase tyrosine phosphatase gene (CPP1) are derepressed in the yeast-to-hyphal transition on solid surfaces in vitro at ambient temperatures and this gene is therefore required for repression of the yeast-to-hyphal switch. The
Impaired polymorphonuclear neutrophil leukocyte (PMN) function around parturition has been associated with increased clinical mastitis in dairy cows. Rolling and attachment of PMN to the endothelium is the first step in the recruitment process and is accomplished by interaction between L-selectin on
The objectives of this study were to determine alterations in the serum metabolites related to amino acid (AA), carbohydrate, and lipid metabolism in transition dairy cows before diagnosis of subclinical mastitis (SCM), during, and after diagnosis of disease. A subclinical mastitis case was
The amino acid requirements of seven strains of Staphylococcus aureus isolated from cases of bovine mastitis were determined. Arginine, cystine, glycine, leucine, proline and valine were essential for the growth of all isolates. In addition, all isolates required one or more of the following:
Prolactin is the key hormone to stimulate milk synthesis in mammary epithelial cells. It signals through the Jak2-Stat5 pathway to induce the expression of β-casein, a milk protein which is often used as a marker for mammary differentiation. Here we examined the effect of pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate
Staphylococcus aureus is the most important etiological agent of bovine mastitis, a disease that causes significant economic losses to the dairy industry. Several vaccines to prevent the disease have been tested, with limited success. The aim of this study was to obtain a suitable attenuated aro
Mastitis is the most commonly diagnosed infectious disease reducing milk yield and quality and is accompanied by mammary tissue damage in both humans and animals. Mastitis incurs welfare and economic costs as well as environmental concerns regarding treatment. Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) is a
Four strains of nutritionally variant streptococci (NVS) were isolated from the milk of mastitic cows and one strain from the lungs of a laboratory Norway rat which died from suppurative pneumonia. In primary cultivation NVS grew aerobically and anaerobically within 48-hour incubation at a
Three coagulase-negative Staphylococcus species (CNS) (Staphylococcus epidermidis, Staphylococcus xylosus and Staphylococcus hyicus), from the milk of cows with mastitis, were used to evaluate adherence to and internalization by bovine mammary epithelial cells, and to investigate involvement of host
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
Previous reports indicated that bovine mammary epithelial cells internalized Streptococcus uberis, a bovine mastitis pathogen, and that inhibitors of F-actin microfilament polymerization inhibited bacterial internalization into mammary epithelial cells. In the present report, we show that inhibitors
The lactoferrin gene sequences of 70 unrelated dairy cows representing six different dairy breeds were investigated for single nucleotide polymorphisms to establish a baseline of polymorphisms that exist within the Irish bovine population. Twenty-nine polymorphisms were identified within a 2.2kb