Corynebacteria in bovine quarter milk samples—species and somatic cell counts

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Corynebacteria in bovine quarter milk samples—species and somatic cell counts. / Lücken, Anneke; Wente, Nicole; Zhang, Yanchao; Woudstra, Svenja; Krömker, Volker.

In: Pathogens, Vol. 10, No. 7, 831, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lücken, A, Wente, N, Zhang, Y, Woudstra, S & Krömker, V 2021, 'Corynebacteria in bovine quarter milk samples—species and somatic cell counts', Pathogens, vol. 10, no. 7, 831. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10070831

APA

Lücken, A., Wente, N., Zhang, Y., Woudstra, S., & Krömker, V. (2021). Corynebacteria in bovine quarter milk samples—species and somatic cell counts. Pathogens, 10(7), [831]. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10070831

Vancouver

Lücken A, Wente N, Zhang Y, Woudstra S, Krömker V. Corynebacteria in bovine quarter milk samples—species and somatic cell counts. Pathogens. 2021;10(7). 831. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10070831

Author

Lücken, Anneke ; Wente, Nicole ; Zhang, Yanchao ; Woudstra, Svenja ; Krömker, Volker. / Corynebacteria in bovine quarter milk samples—species and somatic cell counts. In: Pathogens. 2021 ; Vol. 10, No. 7.

Bibtex

@article{e385794cd7774e789297956ce608990a,
title = "Corynebacteria in bovine quarter milk samples—species and somatic cell counts",
abstract = "In this species differentiation study of Corynebacterium spp. (C. spp.), quarter foremilk samples from 48 farms were included. These were obtained from both clinically healthy cows and those with clinical mastitis. First, all samples were examined cyto-microbiologically and all catalase-positive rods were differentiated using the direct transfer method in MALDI-TOF MS. C. bovis, C. amycolatum, C. xerosis, and five other species were identified with proportions of 90.1%, 7.7%, and 0.8% for the named species, respectively, and 1.4% for the remaining unnamed species. In addition, somatic cell count (SCC) was determined by flow cytometry. Based on this, the isolates were classified into four udder health groups: “latent infection”, “subclinical mastitis”, “clinical mastitis” and “others”. Approximately 90% of isolates of C. bovis and C. amycolatum were from latently and subclinically infected quarters. Of the C. bovis isolates, 5.8% were obtained from milk samples from clinical mastitis, whereas C. amycolatum was not present in clinical mastitis. The distribution of groups in these two species differed significantly. The geometric mean SCC of all species combined was 76,000 SCC/mL, almost the same as the SCC of C. bovis. With 50,000 SCC/mL, the SCC of C. amycolatum was slightly below the SCC of C. bovis. Through the species-level detection and consideration of SCC performed here, it is apparent that individual species differ in terms of their pathogenicity. Overall, their classification as minor pathogens with an SCC increase is confirmed.",
keywords = "Bovine mastitis, Corynebacteria, MALDI-TOF MS, SCC, Species diagnostics",
author = "Anneke L{\"u}cken and Nicole Wente and Yanchao Zhang and Svenja Woudstra and Volker Kr{\"o}mker",
note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgments: The authors wish to thank the Steinbeis Research Center Milk Science, Germany for supporting the study by funding the first author. Funding Information: Funding: This research was funded by Steinbeis Research Center Milk Science, grant number 220. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.3390/pathogens10070831",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "Pathogens",
issn = "2076-0817",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Corynebacteria in bovine quarter milk samples—species and somatic cell counts

AU - Lücken, Anneke

AU - Wente, Nicole

AU - Zhang, Yanchao

AU - Woudstra, Svenja

AU - Krömker, Volker

N1 - Funding Information: Acknowledgments: The authors wish to thank the Steinbeis Research Center Milk Science, Germany for supporting the study by funding the first author. Funding Information: Funding: This research was funded by Steinbeis Research Center Milk Science, grant number 220. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - In this species differentiation study of Corynebacterium spp. (C. spp.), quarter foremilk samples from 48 farms were included. These were obtained from both clinically healthy cows and those with clinical mastitis. First, all samples were examined cyto-microbiologically and all catalase-positive rods were differentiated using the direct transfer method in MALDI-TOF MS. C. bovis, C. amycolatum, C. xerosis, and five other species were identified with proportions of 90.1%, 7.7%, and 0.8% for the named species, respectively, and 1.4% for the remaining unnamed species. In addition, somatic cell count (SCC) was determined by flow cytometry. Based on this, the isolates were classified into four udder health groups: “latent infection”, “subclinical mastitis”, “clinical mastitis” and “others”. Approximately 90% of isolates of C. bovis and C. amycolatum were from latently and subclinically infected quarters. Of the C. bovis isolates, 5.8% were obtained from milk samples from clinical mastitis, whereas C. amycolatum was not present in clinical mastitis. The distribution of groups in these two species differed significantly. The geometric mean SCC of all species combined was 76,000 SCC/mL, almost the same as the SCC of C. bovis. With 50,000 SCC/mL, the SCC of C. amycolatum was slightly below the SCC of C. bovis. Through the species-level detection and consideration of SCC performed here, it is apparent that individual species differ in terms of their pathogenicity. Overall, their classification as minor pathogens with an SCC increase is confirmed.

AB - In this species differentiation study of Corynebacterium spp. (C. spp.), quarter foremilk samples from 48 farms were included. These were obtained from both clinically healthy cows and those with clinical mastitis. First, all samples were examined cyto-microbiologically and all catalase-positive rods were differentiated using the direct transfer method in MALDI-TOF MS. C. bovis, C. amycolatum, C. xerosis, and five other species were identified with proportions of 90.1%, 7.7%, and 0.8% for the named species, respectively, and 1.4% for the remaining unnamed species. In addition, somatic cell count (SCC) was determined by flow cytometry. Based on this, the isolates were classified into four udder health groups: “latent infection”, “subclinical mastitis”, “clinical mastitis” and “others”. Approximately 90% of isolates of C. bovis and C. amycolatum were from latently and subclinically infected quarters. Of the C. bovis isolates, 5.8% were obtained from milk samples from clinical mastitis, whereas C. amycolatum was not present in clinical mastitis. The distribution of groups in these two species differed significantly. The geometric mean SCC of all species combined was 76,000 SCC/mL, almost the same as the SCC of C. bovis. With 50,000 SCC/mL, the SCC of C. amycolatum was slightly below the SCC of C. bovis. Through the species-level detection and consideration of SCC performed here, it is apparent that individual species differ in terms of their pathogenicity. Overall, their classification as minor pathogens with an SCC increase is confirmed.

KW - Bovine mastitis

KW - Corynebacteria

KW - MALDI-TOF MS

KW - SCC

KW - Species diagnostics

U2 - 10.3390/pathogens10070831

DO - 10.3390/pathogens10070831

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34357981

AN - SCOPUS:85110491454

VL - 10

JO - Pathogens

JF - Pathogens

SN - 2076-0817

IS - 7

M1 - 831

ER -

ID: 275592694