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. 2008 Nov;46(11):3728-35.
doi: 10.1128/JCM.00769-08. Epub 2008 Sep 17.

Molecular types and genetic profiles of Staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from bovine intramammary infections and extramammary sites

Affiliations

Molecular types and genetic profiles of Staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from bovine intramammary infections and extramammary sites

M Haveri et al. J Clin Microbiol. 2008 Nov.

Abstract

Staphylococcus aureus isolates collected from sites of intramammary infection during a 10-month period and from extramammary sites (dairy cow teat skin, teat canals, and skin lesions; milking liners; and hands and nostrils of milking personnel) at two separately managed Finnish dairy herd establishments were analyzed to study the sources and reservoirs of bovine S. aureus intramammary infection. Selected isolates were subjected to pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) typing and PCR analysis for genes encoding hemolysins (hla to hlg), leukocidins (lukED and lukM), superantigens (sea, sec, sed, seg to seo, seu, and tst), adhesins (fnbA and fnbB), and penicillin and methicillin resistance (blaZ and mecA). S. aureus was found throughout the herds in 94% of the cows. Nine PFGE types were found, with the herds each having their own predominant type and sharing one type. The degree of diversity of PFGE types in herd II, which integrated foreign heifers, was higher than that in herd I. For both herds, the majority of the PFGE-typed isolates both from milk and from extramammary sites represented the predominant PFGE types. In isolates from herd I, the most prevalent genes were hla-hlg, lukED, and fnbA; in those from herd II, they were hla, hld, hlg, lukED, and fnbA. The other genes were pulsotype linked within the herds. The predominant PFGE types carried both fnbA and fnbB; only fnbA was detected in the other PFGE types. No connection between specific virulence genes and the origins of isolates was found. The results suggest that for the two herds, most S. aureus isolates from extramammary sites were indistinguishable from the isolates infecting the mammary gland and that those sites can thus act as origins and reservoirs of intramammary infections. However, contamination in the opposite direction cannot be excluded.

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Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
Dendrogram showing the genetic relatedness of S. aureus pulsotypes A1 to G observed in herds I and II during the study period. Numbers at the upper left indicate percent similarity.
FIG. 2.
FIG. 2.
Agarose gel electrophoresis analysis showing PCR amplification products for the fnbB gene of S. aureus. Lanes: MP, DNA molecular size markers; 1 and 2, fnbB-positive isolates 774 and 196; 3, fnbB variant (teat orifice isolate); 4, fnbB-positive control CCUG 47326; and 5, negative control.

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