Commensal cow Roseburia reduces gut-dysbiosis-induced mastitis through inhibiting bacterial translocation by producing butyrate in mice.

Cell Rep

Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Jilin University, Changchun, Jilin 130062, China. Electronic address:

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cows with mastitis have a problem in their gut bacteria, which is called gut dysbiosis, where harmful bacteria grow and good bacteria decrease.
  • When researchers transferred gut bacteria from sick cows to healthy mice, it made the mice sick, showing how bad bacteria can move from the gut to other body parts like the mammary gland.
  • A good bacteria called Roseburia helps protect against this sickness by making a substance that reduces inflammation and helps repair barriers in the body, but more research is needed to understand how this works in cows and humans.

Article Abstract

The precise mechanism by which gut dysbiosis contributes to the pathogenesis of extraintestinal diseases and how commensal microbes mediate these processes remain unclear. Here, we show that cows with mastitis had marked gut dysbiosis, characterized by the enrichment of opportunistic pathogenic Escherichia_Shigella and the depletion of commensal Roseburia. Fecal microbiota transplantation from donor cows with mastitis (M-FMT) to recipient mice significantly caused mastitis and changed the gut and mammary microbiota in mice. Notably, M-FMT facilitated the translocation of pathobiont from the gut into the mammary gland, and the depletion of Enterobacteriaceae alleviated M-FMT-induced mastitis in mice. In contrast, commensal Roseburia intestinalis improved M-FMT-induced mastitis and microbial dysbiosis in the gut and mammary gland and limited bacterial translocation by producing butyrate, which was associated with inflammatory signaling inhibition and barrier repair. Our research suggests that commensal Roseburia alleviates gut-dysbiosis-induced mastitis, although further studies in dairy cows and humans are needed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111681DOI Listing

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