Differential induction of complement fragment C5a and inflammatory cytokines during intramammary infections with Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus
C. Riollet et al., Differential induction of complement fragment C5a and inflammatory cytokines during intramammary infections with Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus, CL DIAG LAB, 7(2), 2000, pp. 161-167
The prompt recruitment of neutrophils to the site of infection is essential
for the defense of the bovine mammary gland against invading pathogens and
is determinant for the outcome of the infection. Escherichia coli is known
to induce clinical mastitis, characterized by an intense neutrophil recrui
tment leading to the eradication of the bacteria, whereas Staphylococcus au
reus induces subclinical mastitis accompanied by a moderate neutrophil recr
uitment and the establishment of chronic mastitis. To elicit the neutrophil
recruitment into the udder, inflammatory mediators must be produced after
recognition of the invading pathogen. To our knowledge, those mediators hav
e never been studied during S. aureus mastitis, although understanding of t
he neutrophil recruitment mechanisms could allow a better understanding of
the differences in the pathogeneses elicited by E, coli and S. aureus, Ther
efore, we studied, at several time points, the accumulation of neutrophils
and the presence of the chemoattractant complement fragment C5a and of the
cytokines interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), tumor necrosis factor alpha, and
IL-8 in milk after inoculation of E, coli or S, aureus in lactating bovine
udders. The low levels of C5a and the absence of cytokines in milk from S.
aureus-infected cows, compared to the high levels found in milk from E, col
i-infected animals, mirror the differences in the severities of the two inf
lammatory reactions. The cytokine deficit in milk after S. aureus inoculati
on in the lactating bovine mammary gland could contribute to the establishm
ent of chronic mastitis. This result could help in the design of preventive
or curative strategies against chronic mastitis.