INVESTIGADORES
PELLEGRINO Matias Santiago
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Evaluation of the in vitro efficacy of Lactobacillus perolens CRL 1724, as a potential probiotic strain for the prevention of bovine mastitis
Autor/es:
FROLA, I.; PELLEGRINO, M.; GIRAUDO, J.; DUCRÓS, E.; NADER-MACIAS, MEF; BOGNI, C.
Lugar:
Santiago de Chile
Reunión:
Congreso; XXVI World Buiatrics Congress; 2010
Institución organizadora:
World Association for Buiatrics
Resumen:
Bovine MASTITIS is one of the most expensive diseases in dairy farming.Our research group is involved in the design of veterinary probiotic products to be applied intramammary in dairy cows to prevent MASTITIS.In a previous work, a strain of Lactobacillus perolens CRL 1724 was isolated from milk of healthy dairy cows and deeply characterized as potentially probiotic.In this work, we investigate the role of CRL 1724 strain for inhibiting and co-aggregate with potential pathogens causing bovine MASTITIS (PPCBM), as well as the in vitro capacity of this strain to adhere to bovine teat canal epithelial cells (BTCC).For inhibitory activity, the cross striations technique in MRS 1.2% agar was used. L. perolens was faced to fourteen PPCBM characterized as Staphylococcus spp. (2), Streptococcus spp. (7) Enterococcus spp. (2), Klebsiella spp. (1), E. coli (1) and Pseudomonas spp (1).For co-aggregation assay 500µl of L. perolens CRL 1724 (109 cfu/ml) were mixed with 500µl of each PPCBM (14) by vortexing, incubated at 37°C and the Gram-stained suspensions obtained evaluated through optical microscope.For adherence assay, 500 µl of BTCC (obtained by scrapping the teat canal wall) and a suspension of 500 µl L. perolens CRL 1724 (109 cfu/ml) were mixed and incubated under low agitation at 37ºC for 1h. The tubes were centrifuged, the supernatant discarded and the pellets suspended in MEM, and washed under the same conditions.Bacterial binding to BTCC were examined by optical microscope (Gram and Hematoxylin-Eosin stains) and fixed with 3.16% glutaraldehyde in 0.1M pH 7.4 phosphate buffers to be examined under Scanning Electron Microscope. L. perolens CRL 1724 presented a high percentage (71.4%) of inhibition against PPCBM assayed. L. perolens CRL 1724 was able to co-aggregate most of the PPCBM, but a low co-agregation was observed with Pseudomonas spp. and Klebsiella spp.A high pattern of adhesion of L. perolens CRL 1724 to BTCC (14.4 and 75% for the Adhesion index and Percentage of adhesion respectively) was observed. L. perolens CRL 1724 BTCC adhesion was confirmed by Scanning Electron Microscopy.The morphologic or ultrastructural modifications of the cells in contact of with lactobacilli adheres were not observed.The results obtained in this work provide the main and first evidence to considered L. perolens CRL 1724 as a potential probiotic strain to be included in the generation of non-antibiotic formulation for the treatment and prevention of MASTITIS in dairy cows.