Staphylococcus aureus is the main etiological agent of bovine mastitis. Intramammary infections are difficult to cure and vaccination appears to be an alternative to prevent the disease. Research has focused on the development of mutants affected in the synthesis of pathogenicity determinants. We constructed a mutant strain (RC122) after chemical mutagenesis. In a mouse model, the strain was shown to be 1500 times less virulent, showed similar kinetics of disappearance in the kidney as its parental strain, and a good degree of protection against a challenge from homologous and heterologous strains. The objective of the present report was to study the avirulent RC122 S. aureus mutant strain in rabbit and bovine infection models. The results clearly show that RC122 was less virulent than its parental strain in a rabbit skin model, and was also correlated with its avirulence as an udder pathogen. These traits make the RC122 mutant strain interesting as a potential strain for an experimental vaccine trial in dairy herds.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC227018 | PMC |
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