| Literature DB >> 26092571 |
Rebecca M Mitchell1,2, Ynte Schukken3,4, Ad Koets5,6, Maarten Weber7, Douwe Bakker8, Judy Stabel9, Robert H Whitlock10, Yoram Louzoun11.
Abstract
The objective of this paper is to study shedding patterns of cows infected with Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP). While multiple single farm studies of MAP dynamics were reported, there is not large scale meta-analysis of both natural and experimental infections. Large difference in shedding patterns between experimentally and naturally infected cows were observed. Experimental infections are thus probably driven by different pathological mechanisms. For further evaluations of shedding patterns only natural infections were used. Within such infections, the transition to high shedding was studied as a proxy to the development of a clinical disease. The majority of studied cows never developed high shedding levels. Those that do, typically never reduced their shedding level to low or no shedding. Cows that eventually became high shedders showed a pattern of continuous shedding. In contrast, cows with an intermittent shedding pattern had a low probability to ever become high shedders. In addition, cows that start shedding at a younger age (less than three years of age) have a lower hazard of becoming high shedders compared to cows starting to shed at an older age. These data suggest the presence of three categories of immune control. Cows that are intermittent shedders have the infection process under control (no progressive infection). Cows that start shedding persistently at a young age partially control the infection, but eventually will be high shedders (slow progressive infection), while cows that start shedding persistently at an older age cannot effectively control the infection and become high shedders rapidly.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26092571 PMCID: PMC4474556 DOI: 10.1186/s13567-015-0188-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Figure 1Comparison of experimental and natural infections. A - Upper left drawing - typical shedding pattern in experimental infections. Most infected cows switch between low and high shedding, while in naturally infected cows, the shedding level rapidly rise from a non-infected state to high shedding. Each color represents an individual cow. B - Upper right drawing. Distribution of switch numbers in naturally infected and experimentally infected cows. The fraction of naturally infected cows with more than 1 switch is less than 5%, while most experimental infections have more than one switch. A switch is defined as an increase followed by a decrease in the shedding level. C,D - Lower left and right panels - distribution of times to first shedding (left) and to high shedding (right) from the birth of the cow. Experimentally infected cows shed earlier and reach high shedding earlier than naturally infected cows. The values at 5000 days represent the cows that never reach high shedding.
Statistics of field studies
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| Study 1 | 1028 | 4259 | 0.586576 | 0.003891 | 0.000006 | 0.012235 |
| Study 2 | 695 | 2692 | 0.726619 | 0.002878 | 0.00005 | 0.027256 |
| Study 3 | 1072 | 6112 | 0.991604 | 0.182836 | 0.0002 | 0.12309 |
First column is number of different cows, followed by Total number of samples. The following column is the fraction of cows that were ever positive, and the fraction of cows that were ever high shedders. The following columns are the risk per day of becoming high shedder for any cow, and the fraction of all samples that were positive.
Frequency of samples with different CFU values in each field study
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| Study 1 | 13 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 5 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Study 2 | 31 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 0 |
| Study 3 | 0 | 0 | 413 | 0 | 0 | 125 | 0 | 0 | 187 | 0 |
Figure 2Comparison of intermittent and continuous shedding. A. Upper left panel. Histogram of positive sample number (full black line) and total number of samples (grey line). The ratio between the two is not constant showing that positive samples are not a simple artefact of the analysis with a constant probability. B,D. Upper right and lower right drawings fraction of cows not reaching high shedding and cumulative hazard of reaching high shedding for intermittent cows and continuous cows. The hazard to become a high shedder is significantly lower in intermittent cows than in continuous cows. C. Lower left panel Histogram of time from birth to high shedding for intermittent and continuous shedders. The distribution is highly similar among the two groups.
Figure 3Effect of age. A. Upper left panel - hazard of becoming a shedder (gray line) and becoming a high shedder (dark line). The hazard increases rapidly at the age of two, which is first measurement for most cows. The shedding hazard increases significantly before the high shedding hazard. Following the initial rise, the hazard decreases slowly. B. Upper right panel. The population was divided into three groups: young cows (less than three years) adult cows (3–5 years), and old cows (above 5 years). Young cows have a much longer time to high shedding than old or adult cows. C. Lower left panel - negative correlation between age of onset of shedding and time to high shedding. The line represents a linear regression. The correlation is highly significant (p < 1.e-8). D. Lower right panel. Fraction not reaching high shedding for young and adult intermittent shedder (thick lines) and for young and adult continuous shedders (thick gray lines). The young continuous shedders survive longer than adult shedders, but less than intermittent shedders.