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Parturition in dairy cows temporarily alters the expression of genes in circulating neutrophils

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-03, 15:19 authored by Mallory Crookenden, Axel HeiserAxel Heiser, Alan Murray, Venkata Dukkipati, Jane Kay, Juan Loor, Susanne Meier, Murray Mitchell, Kasey Moyes, Caroline Walker, John Roche
Extensive metabolic and physiologic changes occur during the peripartum, concurrent with a high incidence of infectious disease. Immune dysfunction is a likely contributor to the increased risk of disease at this time. Studies using high-yielding, total mixed ration-fed cows have indicated that neutrophil function is perturbed over the transition period; however, this reported dysfunction has yet to be investigated in moderate-yielding, grazing dairy cows. Therefore, we investigated changes in the expression of genes involved in neutrophil function. Blood was collected from cows at 5 time points over the transition period: precalving (−1 wk; n = 46), day of calving (d 0; n = 46), and postcalving at wk 1 (n = 46), wk 2 (n = 45), and wk 4 (n = 43). Neutrophils were isolated by differential centrifugation and gene expression was investigated. Quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR with custom-designed primer pairs and Roche Universal Probe Library (Roche, Basel, Switzerland) chemistry, combined with microfluidics integrated fluidic circuit chips (96.96 Dynamic Array, San Francisco, CA) were used to investigate the expression of 78 genes involved in neutrophil function and 18 endogenous control genes. Statistical significance between time points was determined using a repeated measures ANOVA. Genes that were differentially expressed over the transition period included those involved in neutrophil adhesion (SELL, ITGB2, and ITGBX), mediation of the immune response (TLR4, HLA-DRA, and CXCR2), maturation, cell cycle progression, apoptosis (MCL1, BCL2, FASLG, and RIPK1), and control of gene expression (PPARG, PPARD, and STAT3). We noted reduced gene expression of proinflammatory cytokines (IFNG, TNF, IL12, and CCL2) on the day of calving, whereas anti-inflammatory cytokine gene expression (IL10) was upregulated. Increased gene expression of antimicrobial peptides (BNBD4, DEFB10, and DEFB1) occurred on the day of calving. Collectively, transcription profiles are indicative of functional changes in neutrophils of grazing dairy cows over the transition period and align with studies in cows of conventional total mixed ration systems. This altered function may predispose cows to disease over the transition period and is likely to be a natural change in function due to parturition.

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Rights statement

© 2016, THE AUTHORS. Published by FASS and Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association®. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/).

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

Elsevier

Journal title

Journal of Dairy Science

ISSN

0022-0302

Citation

Crookenden M. A., Heiser, A., Murray, A., Dukkipati, V. S., Kay, J. K., Loor, J. J., Meier, S., Mitchell, M. D., Moyes, K. M., Walker C. G., & Roche, J. R. (2016). Parturition in dairy cows temporarily alters the expression of genes in circulating neutrophils. Journal of Dairy Science, 99(8), 6470-83. doi: 10.3168/jds.2015-10877

Funder

Core Funding

Contract number

A19854

Job code

33417

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