Metataxonomic analysis of milk microbiota in the bovine subclinical mastitis

Author:

Alessandri Giulia1,Sangalli Elena2,Facchi Mario3,Fontana Federico14,Mancabelli Leonardo56,Donofrio Gaetano2,Ventura Marco16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Probiogenomics, Department of Chemistry, Life Sciences, and Environmental Sustainability, University of Parma , Parco Area delle Scienze 11a, 43124 Parma, Italy

2. Department of Medical-Veterinary Science, University of Parma , Strada del Taglio 10, 43126 Parma , Italy

3. DVM Bovine Practitioner “Bergamo Veterinari” Group , 24124 Bergamo , Italy

4. GenProbio srl , Via Nazario Sauro 3, 43121 Parma , Italy

5. Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Parma , Via Volturno 39, 43125 Parma , Italy

6. Microbiome Research Hub, University of Parma , Parco Area delle Scienze 11a, 43124 Parma , Italy

Abstract

Abstract Subclinical mastitis is one of the most widespread diseases affecting dairy herds with detrimental effects on animal health, milk productivity, and quality. Despite its multifactorial nature, the presence of pathogenic bacteria is regarded one of the main drivers of subclinical mastitis, causing a disruption of the homeostasis of the bovine milk microbial community. However, bovine milk microbiota alterations associated with subclinical mastitis still represents a largely unexplored research area. Therefore, the species-level milk microbiota of a total of 75 milk samples, collected from both healthy and subclinical mastitis-affected cows from two different stables, was deeply profiled through an ITS, rather than a traditional, and less informative, 16S rRNA gene microbial profiling. Surprisingly, the present pilot study not only revealed that subclinical mastitis is characterized by a reduced biodiversity of the bovine milk microbiota, but also that this disease does not induce standard alterations of the milk microbial community across stables. In addition, a flow cytometry-based total bacterial cell enumeration highlighted that subclinical mastitis is accompanied by a significant increment in the number of milk microbial cells. Furthermore, the combination of the metagenomic and flow cytometry approaches allowed to identify different potential microbial marker strictly correlated with subclinical mastitis across stables.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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