Phylogenetic intermixing reveals stable fly-mediated circulation of mastitis-associated bacteria in dairy settings.

系统发育混合揭示了乳腺炎相关细菌在奶牛场中通过稳定蝇介导的传播

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作者:Sommer Andrew J, Worley Travis K, Sapountzis Panagiotis, Coon Kerri L
Stomoxys flies are common blood-feeding pests on dairy farms and are suspected carriers of pathogenic bacteria due to their close association with manure and cattle hosts. While prior studies have used amplicon sequencing and culture-dependent methodologies to characterize the composition of the Stomoxys microbiota, little is known about strain-level acquisition of mastitis-causing bacteria from manure by Stomoxys or the functional diversity of Stomoxys-associated taxa. In this study, we address these key knowledge gaps by using whole genome sequencing to provide the first comparative genomic analysis of Stomoxys-derived Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Staphylococcaceae isolates. Our results show that fly and manure isolates collected from the same farm system are phylogenetically interspersed, with subsequent pairwise genome alignments revealing near-identical strains and plasmids shared between the two sources. We further identify a phylogenetic clade of Mammaliicoccus sciuri containing known mastitis agents associated with both flies and manure. Functional analysis reveals that this clade is highly enriched in xylose metabolism genes that are rare across other M. sciuri lineages, suggesting potential niche differentiation within the genus. Collectively, our results provide strong evidence for the acquisition of fecal-associated bacteria by adult Stomoxys flies, confirming the link between biting muscid flies and manure habitats. The intermixing of fly and manure isolates in clinically relevant taxonomic groups strongly suggests that flies serve as carriers of opportunistic mastitis-causing or other fecal-borne pathogens and may serve as important vehicles of pathogen dissemination across the dairy farm environment.IMPORTANCEBovine mastitis causes up to $32 billion dollars in losses annually in the global dairy industry. Opportunistic intramammary pathogens can be transmitted through incidental contact with bacteria in environmental reservoirs like manure. However, factors affecting the abundance, persistence, and spread of these bacteria are not well understood. Our research shows that mastitis pathogens are present in the guts of blood-feeding Stomoxys (stable) flies, which develop in cow feces and bite cows. Genomic analysis of isolates from flies, manure, and mastitis cases reveals that strains and antimicrobial resistance genes are shared between these sources. Further analysis of fly gut isolates shows virulence factors and possible niche specialization, identifying fly-associated clades with known mastitis agents from mastitic cows. This strongly suggests that Stomoxys flies play a role in the carriage and circulation of bovine mastitis pathogens from manure in dairy settings.

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