Evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.

Amplicon sequencing technique has been increasingly applied to the clinical setting as a sensitive diagnostic tool. Therefore, it is of great importance to develop a DNA extraction method that accurate isolates DNA from complex host-associated microbiota. Given the multifactorial etiology of clinica...

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Main Authors: Svetlana Ferreira Lima, Marcela Lucas de Souza Bicalho, Rodrigo Carvalho Bicalho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5862444?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-46b206d313434c75b615b1029b90d4572020-11-25T02:36:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01133e019367110.1371/journal.pone.0193671Evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.Svetlana Ferreira LimaMarcela Lucas de Souza BicalhoRodrigo Carvalho BicalhoAmplicon sequencing technique has been increasingly applied to the clinical setting as a sensitive diagnostic tool. Therefore, it is of great importance to develop a DNA extraction method that accurate isolates DNA from complex host-associated microbiota. Given the multifactorial etiology of clinical mastitis and the diversified lifestyle of bacterial species harboring in milk, here four distinct milk sample fractions: raw whole milk, milk fat, casein-pellet, and casein-pellet + fat from healthy cows and cows with clinical mastitis, were subjected to bead-beating DNA extraction, followed by high-throughput sequencing. We aimed to identify the best approach for characterization of the milk microbiota and detection of mastitis pathogens (Klebsiella spp., Streptococcus spp. and Escherichia coli). DNA from each milk fraction tested was extracted by two commercial kits, which include physical, mechanical and chemical lysis; in total 280 DNA samples from 35 cows were analyzed. Milk-health-status were categorized into four groups (healthy group; E. coli-mastitis group; Klebsiella spp.-mastitis group; and Streptococcus spp.-mastitis group). Bacterial phyla and families were described for each milk-health-status group across milk sample fractions and DNA extraction kits. For the mastitis groups the relative abundance of f__Enterobacteriaceae and f__Streptococcaceae were compared to determine the efficacy of procedures in detecting the mastitis pathogens. The four milk fractions used allowed efficiently and uniformly detection of the causative agent of mastitis. Only 27% of the families detected in healthy milk were shared among the samples extracted from all fractions of milk samples; followed by 3, 4, and 12% for the samples from E. coli-mastitis, Klebsiella spp.-mastitis and Streptococcus spp-mastitis, respectively. However, the shared families comprised a mean relative abundance greater than 85%, regardless of milk-health-status, milk fraction and DNA isolation method. Taxonomic data at the family level showed that sequences from mastitis milk samples cultured positive for E. coli and Klebsiella spp. were predominantly affiliated with f__Enterobacteriaceae, while for Streptococcus spp. were dominated by f__Streptococcacea, followed by f__Pseudomonadaceae and f__Enterococcaceae. Microbial community analysis revealed that most of the microbial community composition corresponded to milk bacterial species irrespective of the DNA isolation method and milk fraction evaluated.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5862444?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Svetlana Ferreira Lima
Marcela Lucas de Souza Bicalho
Rodrigo Carvalho Bicalho
spellingShingle Svetlana Ferreira Lima
Marcela Lucas de Souza Bicalho
Rodrigo Carvalho Bicalho
Evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Svetlana Ferreira Lima
Marcela Lucas de Souza Bicalho
Rodrigo Carvalho Bicalho
author_sort Svetlana Ferreira Lima
title Evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.
title_short Evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.
title_full Evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.
title_fullStr Evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.
title_sort evaluation of milk sample fractions for characterization of milk microbiota from healthy and clinical mastitis cows.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Amplicon sequencing technique has been increasingly applied to the clinical setting as a sensitive diagnostic tool. Therefore, it is of great importance to develop a DNA extraction method that accurate isolates DNA from complex host-associated microbiota. Given the multifactorial etiology of clinical mastitis and the diversified lifestyle of bacterial species harboring in milk, here four distinct milk sample fractions: raw whole milk, milk fat, casein-pellet, and casein-pellet + fat from healthy cows and cows with clinical mastitis, were subjected to bead-beating DNA extraction, followed by high-throughput sequencing. We aimed to identify the best approach for characterization of the milk microbiota and detection of mastitis pathogens (Klebsiella spp., Streptococcus spp. and Escherichia coli). DNA from each milk fraction tested was extracted by two commercial kits, which include physical, mechanical and chemical lysis; in total 280 DNA samples from 35 cows were analyzed. Milk-health-status were categorized into four groups (healthy group; E. coli-mastitis group; Klebsiella spp.-mastitis group; and Streptococcus spp.-mastitis group). Bacterial phyla and families were described for each milk-health-status group across milk sample fractions and DNA extraction kits. For the mastitis groups the relative abundance of f__Enterobacteriaceae and f__Streptococcaceae were compared to determine the efficacy of procedures in detecting the mastitis pathogens. The four milk fractions used allowed efficiently and uniformly detection of the causative agent of mastitis. Only 27% of the families detected in healthy milk were shared among the samples extracted from all fractions of milk samples; followed by 3, 4, and 12% for the samples from E. coli-mastitis, Klebsiella spp.-mastitis and Streptococcus spp-mastitis, respectively. However, the shared families comprised a mean relative abundance greater than 85%, regardless of milk-health-status, milk fraction and DNA isolation method. Taxonomic data at the family level showed that sequences from mastitis milk samples cultured positive for E. coli and Klebsiella spp. were predominantly affiliated with f__Enterobacteriaceae, while for Streptococcus spp. were dominated by f__Streptococcacea, followed by f__Pseudomonadaceae and f__Enterococcaceae. Microbial community analysis revealed that most of the microbial community composition corresponded to milk bacterial species irrespective of the DNA isolation method and milk fraction evaluated.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5862444?pdf=render
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