AI Article Synopsis

  • Infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis (IBK), or pinkeye, severely impacts the cattle industry, primarily caused by Moraxella species that colonize both infected and healthy eyes, indicating potential changes in the ocular microbiota.
  • A study analyzing 104 ocular swabs from cattle across 16 herds used advanced sequencing techniques, finding similar bacterial groups in both IBK cases and healthy eyes, but with a higher percentage of Moraxella spp. in IBK-affected eyes.
  • A new Moraxella species, Mor. oculobovii, was identified as likely non-pathogenic, suggesting that shifts in the ocular microbiome could contribute to IBK development, necessitating further research on the microbi

Article Abstract

Infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis (IBK), commonly known as pinkeye, has a marked negative impact on the economy of the cattle industry. Moraxella species, including Mor. bovis and Mor. bovoculi, which have been associated with this disease, colonize clinically healthy eyes as well, suggesting that there are intrinsic changes that may occur to the ocular microbiota or the involvement of additional unrecognized organisms that contribute to IBK. To evaluate this, 104 ocular swabs collected from eyes with IBK or clinically healthy eyes from 16 different cattle herds were subjected to 16 S rRNA gene PCR and next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis. Organisms detected were similar across the herds and there was no difference in the total number of bacterial groups detected among IBK cases and controls. However, the percentages of the different organisms detected varied between the two groups, including Moraxella spp., with more Moraxella spp. in eyes with IBK than controls. Further, using culture and whole genome NGS, a new species of Moraxella (suggested name Mor. oculobovii) was detected from the eyes of cattle from two farms. This strain is non-hemolytic on blood agar, is missing the RTX operon, and is likely a non-pathogenic strain of the bovine ocular microbiome. Alteration of the ocular microbiota composition may have a predisposing role, enhancing bacterial infection and the occurrence of clinical IBK. Future studies are required to evaluate if these changes are permanent or if there is a shift in the microbiome following recovery from the infection and how antibiotics might affect the microbiome.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vetmic.2023.109752DOI Listing

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