Effects of intramammary infusions of interleukin-8 on milk protein composition and induction of acute-phase protein in cows during mammary involution.

2008 
The effects of interleukin-8 (IL-8) on bovine mammary functions such as milk protein secretion and the blood-milk barrier during mammary involution were evaluated. Following the final milking, recombinant bovine (rb) IL-8 (5 or 25 μg) and a saline placebo were individually infused into the left- and right-front teat cisterns of 6 cows, respectively. Three cows without treatment at the final milking were also used as controls. Mammary secretions and blood were collected at −24, 0, 10, 24, 72, 168, 336, and 720 h after infusion. In the mammary glands infused with 25 μg of rbIL-8, the increases in somatic cell counts and in the concentrations of serum albumin, IgG1 and IgG2, and the decreases in the concentrations of α- and β-casein and β-lactoglobulin were greater than in the control glands. In the mammary glands infused with 5 μg of rbIL-8, compared to the glands infused with 25 μg of rbIL-8, these changes were moderate. These results indicate that rbIL-8 impairs the integrity of the blood-milk barrier and suppresses milk-specific protein secretions. In the cows infused with 25 μg of rbIL-8, the rectal temperature and serum haptoglobin level were transiently elevated after the infusion, showing that intramammary infusion of rbIL-8 could elicit systemic inflammation.
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