AI Article Synopsis

  • - Calves are very vulnerable to gastrointestinal infections, especially from pathogens like C. parvum, which can lead to severe diarrhea, poor growth, or even death. Consequently, studying the interaction between the pathogen and the gut microbiota is essential for developing better treatment strategies.
  • - In a study with neonatal calves challenged by C. parvum, significant symptoms like fever and diarrhea were observed five days after exposure, along with signs of severe intestinal inflammation and an unbalanced gut microbiome characterized by harmful bacteria and toxins.
  • - Supplementing calves with high-quality colostrum showed some promise in easing clinical symptoms and improving gut immune responses, making the gut environment resemble that of healthy calves, although its overall effectiveness in reducing diarrhea was limited.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Calves are highly susceptible to gastrointestinal infection with (), which can result in watery diarrhea and eventually death or impaired development. With little to no effective therapeutics, understanding the host's microbiota and pathogen interaction at the mucosal immune system has been critical to identify and test novel control strategies.

Methods: Herein, we used an experimental model of C. parvum challenge in neonatal calves to describe the clinical signs and histological and proteomic profiling of the mucosal innate immunity and microbiota shifts by metagenomics in the ileum and colon during cryptosporidiosis. Also, we investigated the impact of supplemental colostrum feeding on infection.

Results: We showed that challenged calves experienced clinical signs including pyrexia and diarrhea 5 days post challenge. These calves showed ulcerative neutrophil ileitis with a proteomic signature driven by inflammatory effectors, including reactive oxygen species and myeloperoxidases. Colitis was also noticed with an aggravated mucin barrier depletion and incompletely filled goblet cells. The challenged calves also displayed a pronounced dysbiosis with a high prevalence of species (spp.) and number of exotoxins, adherence factors, and secretion systems related to spp. and other enteropathogens, including spp., sp., spp., and spp. Daily supplementation with a high-quality bovine colostrum product mitigated some of the clinical signs and modulated the gut immune response and concomitant microbiota to a pattern more similar to that of healthy unchallenged calves.

Discussion: infection in neonatal calves provoked severe diarrheic neutrophilic enterocolitis, perhaps augmented due to the lack of fully developed innate gut defenses. Colostrum supplementation showed limited effect mitigating diarrhea but demonstrated some clinical alleviation and specific modulatory influence on host gut immune responses and concomitant microbiota.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10189047PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2023.1165312DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

neonatal calves
12
clinical signs
12
immune responses
8
bovine colostrum
8
colostrum supplementation
8
challenged calves
8
spp spp
8
gut immune
8
concomitant microbiota
8
calves
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!