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Featured researches published by Eric Vautor.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Molecular Basis of Virulence in Staphylococcus aureus Mastitis

Caroline Le Maréchal; Núbia Seyffert; Julien Jardin; David Hernandez; Gwénaël Jan; Lucie Rault; Vasco Azevedo; Patrice Francois; Jacques Schrenzel; Maarten van de Guchte; Sergine Even; Nadia Berkova; Richard Thiéry; J. Ross Fitzgerald; Eric Vautor; Yves Le Loir

Background S. aureus is one of the main pathogens involved in ruminant mastitis worldwide. The severity of staphylococcal infection is highly variable, ranging from subclinical to gangrenous mastitis. This work represents an in-depth characterization of S. aureus mastitis isolates to identify bacterial factors involved in severity of mastitis infection. Methodology/Principal Findings We employed genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic approaches to comprehensively compare two clonally related S. aureus strains that reproducibly induce severe (strain O11) and milder (strain O46) mastitis in ewes. Variation in the content of mobile genetic elements, iron acquisition and metabolism, transcriptional regulation and exoprotein production was observed. In particular, O11 produced relatively high levels of exoproteins, including toxins and proteases known to be important in virulence. A characteristic we observed in other S. aureus strains isolated from clinical mastitis cases. Conclusions/Significance Our data are consistent with a dose-dependant role of some staphylococcal factors in the hypervirulence of strains isolated from severe mastitis. Mobile genetic elements, transcriptional regulators, exoproteins and iron acquisition pathways constitute good targets for further research to define the underlying mechanisms of mastitis severity.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2009

Molecular characterisation of Staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from small and large ruminants reveals a host rather than tissue specificity

P.D.D. Alves; J.A. McCulloch; Sergine Even; C. Le Maréchal; Anne Thierry; N. Grosset; Vasco Azevedo; Carlos A. Rosa; Eric Vautor; Y. Le Loir

Staphylococcus aureus is an important pathogen in domestic ruminants. The main objective of this study was to determine the similarity of epidemiologically unrelated S. aureus isolates from bovine, ovine, and caprine hosts regardless the locus of isolation (nares and udder). By pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, seven major pulsotypes were identified among 153 isolates recovered from 12 different regions of France as well as from Brazil, the USA and Belgium. Typing of the accessory gene regulator (agr) and capsular (cap) serotype was carried out on all the isolates and revealed the predominance of agr I and III and of cap8 regardless the ruminant host species. Screening for methicilin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) was carried out by disk diffusion and revealed a prevalence of only 3.2% of MRSA among the strains tested. These results suggest the existence of a host rather than tissue specificity among S. aureus isolates colonising the ruminant species and suggest a limited transmission of those isolates between large (bovine) and small (ovine-caprine) ruminants. The agr class and cap types correlated with pulsotype clusters rather than with a specific host species. Antimicrobial resistance appears not to have contributed to the predominance of any given genotypes, and MRSA prevalence appears very low in ruminant isolates.


Veterinary Research | 2011

Staphylococcus aureus seroproteomes discriminate ruminant isolates causing mild or severe mastitis

Caroline Le Maréchal; Julien Jardin; Gwénaël Jan; Sergine Even; Coralie Pulido; Jean-Michel Guibert; David Hernandez; Patrice Francois; Jacques Schrenzel; Dieter Demon; Evelyne Meyer; Nadejda Berkova; Richard Thiéry; Eric Vautor; Yves Le Loir

Staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of mastitis in ruminants. In ewe mastitis, symptoms range from subclinical to gangrenous mastitis. S. aureus factors or host-factors contributing to the different outcomes are not completely elucidated. In this study, experimental mastitis was induced on primiparous ewes using two S. aureus strains, isolated from gangrenous (strain O11) or subclinical (strain O46) mastitis. Strains induced drastically distinct clinical symptoms when tested in ewe and mice experimental mastitis. Notably, they reproduced mild (O46) or severe (O11) mastitis in ewes. Ewe sera were used to identify staphylococcal immunoreactive proteins commonly or differentially produced during infections of variable severity and to define core and accessory seroproteomes. Such SERological Proteome Analysis (SERPA) allowed the identification of 89 immunoreactive proteins, of which only 52 (58.4%) were previously identified as immunogenic proteins in other staphylococcal infections. Among the 89 proteins identified, 74 appear to constitute the core seroproteome. Among the 15 remaining proteins defining the accessory seroproteome, 12 were specific for strain O11, 3 were specific for O46. Distribution of one protein specific for each mastitis severity was investigated in ten other strains isolated from subclinical or clinical mastitis. We report here for the first time the identification of staphylococcal immunogenic proteins common or specific to S. aureus strains responsible for mild or severe mastitis. These findings open avenues in S. aureus mastitis studies as some of these proteins, expressed in vivo, are likely to account for the success of S. aureus as a pathogen of the ruminant mammary gland.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2009

Development of serological proteome analysis of mastitis by Staphylococcus aureus in ewes.

C. Le Maréchal; Gwénaël Jan; Sergine Even; John Anthony McCulloch; Vasco Azevedo; Régis Thiery; Eric Vautor; Y. Le Loir

Staphylococcus aureus is a major agent of mastitis in ruminants worldwide. So far, efficient measures for its prophylaxis (including vaccination) have proven to be unsuccessful and there is a need for a better understanding of the host response to udder infection by S. aureus. Serological proteome analysis (SERPA) is a promising technique that can be used to identify S. aureus immuno-dominant determinants providing that bacterial culture conditions used to grow S. aureus strains for protein sample preparation mimic the context of mastitis. A S. aureus strain was used in experimental mastitis to generate sheep serum used to determine the best growth conditions for SERPA. Sera collected in the field from different ewes suffering from mastitis by S. aureus were used to confirm experimental observations. Three different culture media (BHI, whey and iron-depleted RPMI) were tested. The influence of aeration and growth phase on protein production was also evaluated by immuno-detection of protein samples prepared from cultures grown in different conditions and obtained from different culture fractions (supernatant, cell wall, and total lysates). Our results showed that culturing in iron-depleted RPMI with (secreted proteins, prepared from stationary phase) or without aeration (cell wall proteins, prepared from early stationary phase, and total proteins, prepared from exponential phase) is the condition that best mimics growth in vivo during mastitis and this in vitro growth condition is to be used henceforth in experiments involving SERPA.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2011

Genome Sequences of Two Staphylococcus aureus Ovine Strains That Induce Severe (Strain O11) and Mild (Strain O46) Mastitis

Caroline Le Maréchal; David Hernandez; Jacques Schrenzel; Sergine Even; Nadia Berkova; Richard Thiéry; Eric Vautor; J. Ross Fitzgerald; Patrice Francois; Yves Le Loir

Staphylococcus aureus is a major etiological agent of mastitis in ruminants. We report here the genome sequences of two ovine strains that were isolated from gangrenous (strain O11) and subclinical (strain O46) ewe mastitis. Both strains belong to the same clonal complex. Despite this close genotypic relationship, the two isolates were shown to reproducibly induce highly divergent types of infections, either severe (O11) or mild (O46) mastitis, in an experimental ewe model.


Veterinary Research | 2009

Difference in virulence between Staphylococcus aureus isolates causing gangrenous mastitis versus subclinical mastitis in a dairy sheep flock

Eric Vautor; Joshua D. Cockfield; Caroline Le Maréchal; Yves Le Loir; Marlène Chevalier; D. Ashley Robinson; Richard Thiéry; Jodi A. Lindsay

Staphylococcus aureus mastitis in dairy sheep ranges from subclinical mastitis to lethal gangrenous mastitis. Neither the S. aureus virulence factors nor the host-factors or the epidemiological events contributing to the different outcomes are known. In a field study in a dairy sheep farm over 21 months, 16 natural isolates of S. aureus were collected from six subclinical mastitis cases, one lethal gangrenous mastitis case, nasal carriage from eight ewes and one isolate from ambient air in the milking room. A genomic comparison of two strains, one responsible for subclinical mastitis and one for lethal gangrenous mastitis, was performed using multi-strain DNA microarrays. Multiple typing techniques (pulsed-field-gel-electrophoresis, multiple-locus variable-number, single-nucleotide polymorphisms, randomly amplified polymorphic DNA, spa typing and sas typing) were used to characterise the remaining isolates and to follow the persistence of the gangrenous isolate in ewes’ nares. Our results showed that the two strains were genetically closely related and they shared 3 615 identical predicted open reading frames. However, the gangrenous mastitis isolate carried variant versions of several genes (sdrD, clfA-B, sasA, sasB, sasD, sasI and splE) and was missing fibrinogen binding protein B (fnbB) and a prophage. The typing results showed that this gangrenous strain emerged after the initial subclinical mastitis screening, but then persisted in the flock in the nares of four ewes. Although we cannot dismiss the role of host susceptibility in the clinical events in this flock, our data support the hypothesis that S. aureus populations had evolved in the sheep flock and that S. aureus genetic variations could have contributed to enhanced virulence.


Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2005

Characterization of 26 isolates of Staphylococcus aureus, predominantly from dairy sheep, using four different techniques of molecular epidemiology.

Eric Vautor; Corinne Jay; Nicolas Chevalier; Nathalie Visomblin; Guy Vernet; Michel Pépin

Little information is available regarding the molecular epidemiology of Staphylococcus aureus–induced mastitis in dairy sheep. In this study, 4 different typing techniques were compared in typing 26 S. aureus isolates, predominantly from cases of subclinical mastitis in dairy ewes. The 4 techniques were pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) on 2 genes (coagulase and clumping factor B), randomly amplified polymorphic DNA–polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (RAPD-PCR), and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). On the basis of discriminatory power as the key parameter of typing systems, MLST and PFGE were found to be the most powerful techniques. The MLST and PFGE could contribute to epidemiological surveillance and evaluation of mastitis control programs, by documenting prevalence and dissemination of endemic clones in infected populations. The results of this study show that a single clone of S. aureus is widely distributed in infected ewe mammary glands.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2012

Staphylococcus aureus proteins differentially recognized by the ovine immune response in mastitis or nasal carriage.

Núbia Seyffert; Caroline Le Maréchal; Julien Jardin; John Anthony McCulloch; Fábio Rogério Rosado; Anderson Miyoshi; Sergine Even; Gwénaël Jan; Nadia Berkova; Eric Vautor; Richard Thiéry; Vasco Azevedo; Yves Le Loir

Staphylococcus aureus is an opportunistic pathogen in dairy ruminants where it is found in healthy carriage and can be a major cause of mastitis. A better knowledge of the host-pathogen interactions is needed to tackle this serious animal health problem. This study aimed at identifying S. aureus proteins differentially expressed by S. aureus in nasal colonization versus mastitis. Serological proteome analysis (SERPA) was used to examine protein samples prepared from culture supernatants of S. aureus strains originally isolated from gangrenous mastitis and nasal carriage (O11) or subclinical mastitis (O46) and to compare patterns of immune-reactive proteins. These staphylococcal proteins were revealed by sera obtained from ewes suffering from S. aureus mastitis and by sera obtained from healthy nulliparous ewes (i.e. no lactation and no mastitis or other symptoms) that were nasally colonized by S. aureus. Altogether 49 staphylococcal immune-reactive proteins were identified in this study. Patterns of proteins revealed by sera from infected- or healthy carrier- animals were comparable and analysis singled out one immune-reactive protein, N-acetylmuramyl-L-alanine amidase, which was recognized by each of the 6 sera from infected animals, when tested individually, and not by the sera of healthy carriers. This is the first study that compares the S. aureus seroproteome in colonization versus mastitis context in ruminants. These results open avenues for studies aiming at a better understanding of the balance between infection and commensal lifestyle in this opportunistic pathogen and at new prevention strategies.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2013

Staphylococcus aureus proteins differentially produced in ewe gangrenous mastitis or ewe milk.

Caroline Le Maréchal; Julien Jardin; Valérie Briard-Bion; Lucie Rault; Nadia Berkova; Eric Vautor; Richard Thiéry; Sergine Even; Yves Le Loir

Despite being one of the main pathogens involved in ruminant mastitis, little is known about what proteins Staphylococcus aureus does express, in vivo, during the infection. Here, two S. aureus strains were isolated from curds formed within the udder of two ewes suffering from gangrenous mastitis. Protein samples were prepared from cell fractions and were analyzed using 1D-LC MS/MS. Results were compared to 1D-LC MS/MS analysis of the same S. aureus strains grown in ewe milk. A total of 365 proteins were identified. Most of them were related to cellular metabolism, cellular division and stress response. Half of the proteins were found in both conditions but a substantial number were specifically found in in vivo conditions and gave indications about the active metabolic status and the stresses encountered by S. aureus within the cistern during a gangrenous mastitis.


Dairy Science & Technology | 2011

Mastitis impact on technological properties of milk and quality of milk products—a review

Caroline Le Maréchal; Richard Thiéry; Eric Vautor; Yves Le Loir

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Caroline Le Maréchal

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Sergine Even

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yves Le Loir

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Gwénaël Jan

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Vasco Azevedo

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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