Correlating milk cytokines and somatic cell counts to intramammary infections in dairy sheep
Giulia Franzoni, Susanna Zinellu, Vittoria D’Ascenzo, Emanuela Giaconi, Giovanni Vito Denti, Marina Adele Lucia Manai, Angelo Fiori, Silvia Dei Giudici, Riccardo Bazzardi, Sara Casu, Antonello Carta, Ilaria Fadda, Ciriaco Ligios, Simone Dore

TL;DR
This study explores how cytokine levels in sheep milk correlate with somatic cell counts and intramammary infections, offering insights into diagnosing subclinical mastitis.
Contribution
The study introduces cytokine profiling as a novel tool for assessing inflammation in dairy sheep mastitis alongside traditional somatic cell counts.
Findings
High SCC groups showed elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines like IL-1α, IL-6, and IFN-γ.
MIP-1α and IL-1α showed the strongest correlation with SCC values.
Cluster analysis revealed distinct cytokine patterns corresponding to infection status and SCC levels.
Abstract
Mastitis represents an important health problem in dairy sheep and somatic cell count (SCC) is frequently used as indicator of subclinical intra-mammary infection. Cytokines might represent another reliable and sensitive tool for defining the inflammatory status in relation with the SCC, thus, the levels of 12 key immune cytokines were monitored in ovine milk samples with different SCC values. First, samples were divided into five SCC-groups: group 1 (0–300 cell/mL*1000, n = 16), group 2 (300–500 cell/mL*1000, n = 16), group 3 (500–1,000 cell/mL*1000, n = 16), group 4 (1000–2000 cell/mL*1000, n = 15), group 5 (> 2000 cell/mL*1000, n = 16). Samples belonging to group 5 presented the highest values of IL-1α, IL-β, IL-6, MIP-1α, MIP-1β, IFN-γ, IL-17, IL-10. Samples belonging to group 1 presented IL-4 levels higher than to those belonging to groups 2–3-4, and lower IL-1α and MIP-1α values…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMilk Quality and Mastitis in Dairy Cows · Reproductive Physiology in Livestock · Infant Nutrition and Health
