AI Article Synopsis

  • Johne's disease is a chronic illness caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP), leading to serious health issues in dairy cattle with no available treatment.
  • Research focused on the interleukin-10 receptor subunit alpha (IL10Rα) to understand its role in the immune response to MAP, using CRISPR/cas9 to knock out the gene in a mammary epithelial cell line (MAC-T).
  • Results showed a significant difference in immune responses between the wild type and IL10Rα knockout cells, suggesting that IL10Rα is crucial for an effective immune reaction against MAP infection and highlights pathways involved in inflammation and immune signaling.

Article Abstract

Background: Johne's disease is a chronic wasting disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP). Johne's disease is highly contagious and MAP infection in dairy cattle can eventually lead to death. With no available treatment for Johne's disease, genetic selection and improvements in management practices could help reduce its prevalence. In a previous study, the gene coding interleukin-10 receptor subunit alpha (IL10Rα) was associated with Johne's disease in dairy cattle. Our objective was to determine how IL10Rα affects the pathogenesis of MAP by examining the effect of a live MAP challenge on a mammary epithelial cell line (MAC-T) that had IL10Rα knocked out using CRISPR/cas9. The wild type and the IL10Rα knockout MAC-T cell lines were exposed to live MAP bacteria for 72 h. Thereafter, mRNA was extracted from infected and uninfected cells. Differentially expressed genes were compared between the wild type and the IL10Rα knockout cell lines. Gene ontology was performed based on the differentially expressed genes to determine which biological pathways were involved.

Results: Immune system processes pathways were targeted to determine the effect of IL10Rα on the response to MAP infection. There was a difference in immune response between the wild type and IL10Rα knockout MAC-T cell lines, and less difference in immune response between infected and not infected IL10Rα knockout MAC-T cells, indicating IL10Rα plays an important role in the progression of MAP infection. Additionally, these comparisons allowed us to identify other genes involved in inflammation-mediated chemokine and cytokine signalling, interleukin signalling and toll-like receptor pathways.

Conclusions: Identifying differentially expressed genes in wild type and ILR10α knockout MAC-T cells infected with live MAP bacteria provided further evidence that IL10Rα contributes to mounting an immune response to MAP infection and allowed us to identify additional potential candidate genes involved in this process. We found there was a complex immune response during MAP infection that is controlled by many genes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11167801PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12863-024-01234-wDOI Listing

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