Temperature effects on the magnitude of the bovineex vivoimmune response towardsMycoplasmopsis bovis

Author:

Démoulins ThomasORCID,Yimthin ThatchaORCID,Lindtke DorotheaORCID,Eggerschwiler LukasORCID,Siegenthaler RaphaelORCID,Labroussaa FabienORCID,Jores JoergORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTAlthough cattle are the mammalian species with most global biomass associated with a huge impact on our planet, their immune system remains poorly understood. Notably, the bovine immune system has peculiarities such as an overrepresentation of γδ T cells that requires particular attention, specifically in an infectious context. In line of 3R principles, we developed anex vivoplatform to dissect host-pathogen interactions. The experimental design was based on two independent complementary readouts: firstly, a novel 12-14 color multiparameter flow cytometry assay measuring maturation (modulation of cell surface marker expression) and activation (intracellular cytokine detection) of monocytes, conventional and plasmacytoid dendritic cells, natural killer cells, γδ T cells, B and T cells; secondly, a multiplex immunoassay monitoring bovine chemokine and cytokine secretion levels. The experiments were conducted on fresh primary bovine blood cells exposed toMycoplasmopsis bovis(M. bovis), a major bovine respiratory pathogen. Besides reaffirming the tight cooperation of the different primary blood cells, we also identified novel key players such as strong IFN-γ secreting NK cells, whose role was so far largely overlooked. Additionally, we compared the host-pathogen interactions at different temperatures, including commonly used 37 °C, ruminant body temperature (38-38.5 °C) and fever (≥39.5 °C). Strikingly, working under ruminant physiological temperature influenced the capacity of most immune cell subsets to respond toM. boviscompared to 37 °C. Under fever-like temperature conditions the immune response was impaired compared to physiological temperature. Our experimental approach, phenotypically delineating the bovine immune system provided a thorough vision of the immune response towardsM. bovisand the influence of temperature towards that immune response.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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