Exosomal Small RNA Survey of Bovine Milk: Discovery of Small RNA Signatures across Bacterial Infections of the Bovine Mammary Glands

Date

2015

Authors

Aswath, Kshama

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Abstract

Mastitis, an endemic disease, affects the mammary glands of lactating cows and contributes to an estimated annual loss of two billion dollars to the U.S. dairy economy (Hogeveen, Huijps, & Lam, 2011). Many bacterial pathogens, for example, Streptococcus uberis, Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli, if left undetected and untreated at sub-clinical stages of infection, can cause an endemic disease like mastitis (Barkema, Green, Bradley, & Zadoks, 2009). Mastitis negatively affects the quality and quantity of milk produced from a lactating animal (De Vliegher, Fox, Piepers, McDougall, & Barkema, 2012) and extensive use of antibiotics to treat this disease can have possible downstream implications on consumer safety, which, in turn pose a threat to human health. Recent research has shown the potential of circulating miRNAs as non-invasive biomarkers in disease diagnosis and therapeutics (Zen & Zhang, 2012). miRNAs present in the milk are shown to be packaged into exosomes, a type of extracellular micro vesicle secreted by various cells (Valadi et al., 2007).

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Keywords

Bioinformatics, Bovine, Exosomes, Mastitis, MiRNA, Next Generation Sequencing

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