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Impact of Staphylococcus aureus infection on the late lactation goat milk proteome: New perspectives for monitoring and understanding mastitis in dairy goats

The milk somatic cell count (SCC) is a standard parameter for monitoring intramammary infections (IMI) in dairy ruminants. In goats, however, the physiological increase in SCC occurring in late lactation heavily compromises its reliability. To identify and understand milk protein changes specificall...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of proteomics 2020-06, Vol.221, p.103763, Article 103763
Main Authors: Pisanu, Salvatore, Cacciotto, Carla, Pagnozzi, Daniela, Uzzau, Sergio, Pollera, Claudia, Penati, Martina, Bronzo, Valerio, Addis, Maria Filippa
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The milk somatic cell count (SCC) is a standard parameter for monitoring intramammary infections (IMI) in dairy ruminants. In goats, however, the physiological increase in SCC occurring in late lactation heavily compromises its reliability. To identify and understand milk protein changes specifically related to IMI, we carried out a shotgun proteomics study comparing high SCC late lactation milk from goats with subclinical Staphylococcus aureus IMI and from healthy goats to low SCC mid-lactation milk from healthy goats. As a result, we detected 52 and 19 differential proteins (DPs) in S. aureus-infected and uninfected late lactation milk, respectively. Unexpectedly, one of the proteins higher in uninfected milk was serum amyloid A. On the other hand, 38 DPs were increased only in S. aureus-infected milk and included haptoglobin and numerous cytoskeletal proteins. Based on STRING analysis, the DPs unique to S. aureus infected milk were mainly involved in defense response, cytoskeleton organization, cell-to-cell, and cell-to-matrix interactions. Being tightly and specifically related to infectious/inflammatory processes, these proteins may hold promise as more reliable markers of IMI than SCC in late lactation goats. The biological relevance of our results lies in the increased understanding of the changes specifically related to bacterial infection of the goat udder in late lactation. The DPs present only in S. aureus infected milk may find application as markers for improving the specificity of subclinical mastitis monitoring and detection in dairy goats in late lactation, when other widespread tools such as the SCC lose diagnostic value. [Display omitted] •Differential shotgun proteomics of S. aureus-infected and healthy late lactation goat milk•The late lactation changes specifically associated to infection were identified•38 DPs were unique to S. aureus infected milk, including haptoglobin•These may represent an alternative to the SCC for monitoring subclinical mastitis in late lactation
ISSN:1874-3919
DOI:10.1016/j.jprot.2020.103763