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Bovine Staphylococcus aureus Superantigens Stimulate the Entire T Cell Repertoire of Cattle

76

Citations

35

References

2018

Year

Abstract

Superantigens (SAgs) represent a diverse family of bacterial toxins that induce Vβ-specific T cell proliferation associated with an array of important diseases in humans and animals, including mastitis of dairy cows. However, an understanding of the diversity and distribution of SAg genes among bovine <i>Staphylococcus aureus</i> strains and their role in the pathogenesis of mastitis is lacking. Population genomic analysis of 195 bovine <i>S. aureus</i> isolates representing 57 unique sequence types revealed that strains encode 2 to 13 distinct SAgs and that the majority of isolates contain 5 or more SAg genes. A genome-scale analysis of bovine reference strain RF122 revealed a complement of 11 predicted SAg genes, which were all expressed <i>in vitro</i> Detection of specific antibodies in convalescent cows suggests expression of 7 of 11 SAgs during natural <i>S. aureus</i> infection. We determined the Vβ T cell activation profile for all functional SAgs encoded by RF122, revealing evidence for bovine host-specific activity among the recently identified RF122-encoded SAgs SElY and SElZ. Remarkably, we discovered that some strains have evolved the capacity to stimulate the entire T cell repertoire of cattle through an array of diverse SAgs, suggesting a key role in bovine immune evasion.

References

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