Back to Search Start Over

Lipopolysaccharide pretreatment of the udder protects against experimental Escherichia coli mastitis.

Authors :
Petzl, Wolfram
Günther, Juliane
Pfister, Tobias
Sauter-Louis, Carola
Goetze, Leopold
von Aulock, Sonja
Hafner-Marx, Angela
Schuberth, Hans-Joachim
Seyfert, Hans-Martin
Zerbe, Holm
Source :
Innate Immunity. Jun2012, Vol. 18 Issue 3, p467-477. 11p.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Exposure to pathogen-associated molecular patterns such as LPS can cause an immune refractory state in mammals known as endotoxin tolerance (ET), resulting in a decreased inflammatory response after pathogen contact. This ET concept was used to reduce the severity of an experimentally-induced clinical mastitis. Cows were pretreated with 1 µg LPS per udder quarter and challenged 72 h (group L72EC) or 240 h (group L240EC) later with 500 CFU Escherichia coli. Pretreated animals showed no leukopenia after challenge, no (L72EC), or only slightly (L240EC), elevated body temperature and significantly reduced systemic and local clinical scores compared with cows that were not pretreated. Whereas an increase of milk somatic cell count after the E. coli challenge was abrogated in L72EC animals, it was significantly delayed in the L240EC group. In both pretreated groups the bacterial load in milk was markedly reduced. Based on the expression of inflammation-related genes in lobulo-alveolar mammary tissue, the tolerizing effect of LPS pretreatment is based on the inhibited up-regulation of inflammatory (TNF-α, IL-6, CXCL8, CCL20) and anti-inflammatory genes (IL-10, IRAK-M). These findings indicate that the concept of ET may be usefully applied as mastitis prophylaxis facilitating a rapid response to microbial infection and avoiding dysregulated inflammation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17534259
Volume :
18
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Innate Immunity
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
76331733
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1753425911422407