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. 2020 May 7;9(19):e00300-20. doi: 10.1128/MRA.00300-20

Draft Genome Sequences of 27 Staphylococcus aureus Strains and 3 Staphylococcus Species Strains Isolated from Bovine Intramammary Infections

Soyoun Park a, Dongyun Jung a, Simon Dufour b,c,d, Jennifer Ronholm a,c,
Editor: Julie C Dunning Hotoppe
PMCID: PMC7206494  PMID: 32381616

Staphylococcus aureus is one of the most common etiological agents responsible for contagious bovine mastitis. Here, we report the draft whole-genome sequences, with annotations, of 27 S. aureus strains and 3 Staphylococcus species strains that were isolated from Holstein cows with intramammary infection in Canada.

ABSTRACT

Staphylococcus aureus is one of the most common etiological agents responsible for contagious bovine mastitis. Here, we report the draft whole-genome sequences, with annotations, of 27 S. aureus strains and 3 Staphylococcus species strains that were isolated from Holstein cows with intramammary infection in Canada.

ANNOUNCEMENT

Staphylococcus aureus is a major pathogen that is responsible for both clinical and subclinical contagious mastitis in dairy cows. Dairy cows with active intramammary infection often have milk yield reductions. Persistent intramammary infections are a common cause of culling in dairy herds, which results in economic losses for the dairy industry (1). Although S. aureus-associated bovine mastitis cases have decreased since the implementation of mastitis control programs, S. aureus remains a challenge for dairy farmers and veterinarians (2, 3). In bovine mastitis control programs, prevention is the best strategy for reducing the burdens in the dairy industry. Although thousands of S. aureus isolates have been sequenced and reported, relatively few are from bovine intramammary infections. The availability of S. aureus isolates from intramammary infections will facilitate understanding of the molecular basis of pathogenic S. aureus characteristics associated with bovine mastitis. The Mastitis Network maintains a culture collection of mastitis isolates from Canada (4); each strain sequenced in this project was obtained from that collection.

Here, we present the draft genome sequences of 27 S. aureus isolates and 3 Staphylococcus sp. isolates from bovine intramammary infections in Canada. The isolates were initially identified at the species level using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization–time of flight (MALDI) mass spectrometry, as described previously (5). Each isolate was cultivated from the –80°C stock on a tryptic soy agar plate, which was incubated overnight at 37°C. A single well-isolated colony was used to inoculate tryptic soy broth, which was incubated overnight at 37°C with agitation at 200 rpm. A 1.5-ml aliquot of the liquid culture was used for DNA extraction with the DNAzol reagent (Invitrogen) and lysostaphin (Sigma-Aldrich) according to the manufacturers’ instructions. Briefly, sequencing libraries were prepared as paired-end libraries with the Nextera Flex DNA library preparation kit (Illumina, San Diego, CA) and Nextera DNA CD indexes (96 indexes, 96 samples), and the libraries were sequenced on a MiSeq benchtop sequencer (Illumina) for 301 cycles in each direction. The reads were assembled de novo into high-quality draft genomes with ProkaryoteAssembly version 0.1.6 (https://github.com/bfssi-forest-dussault/ProkaryoteAssembly). Default parameters were used throughout, with the exception of the trimming step, for which the command trimq=20 2> {stats_out} was used to trim low-quality sequences with a Q score of <20. This assembly resulted in nonoverlapping contiguous sequences being generated for each genome (Table 1). Gene predictions and annotations were performed using the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) Prokaryotic Genome Annotation Pipeline (PGAP).

TABLE 1.

Sequencing and annotation results for S. aureus and Staphylococcus sp. strains isolated from bovine intramammary infections

Strain identification no. BioSample accession no. GenBank accession no. Draft genome size (bp) Coverage (×) GC content (%) No. of contigs No. of CDSsa No. of RNAs
10508732 SAMN14230752 JAANCH000000000 2,735,287 141 32.72 14 2,668 65
41103371 SAMN14230753 JAANCG000000000 2,768,484 122 32.66 18 2,724 62
22200587 SAMN14230754 JAANCF000000000 2,723,469 144 32.72 16 2,653 62
30108394 SAMN14230755 JAANCE000000000 2,722,960 122 32.64 16 2,660 61
22516824 SAMN14230756 JAANCD000000000 2,721,244 159 32.73 14 2,653 64
31713214 SAMN14230757 JAANCC000000000 2,734,685 129 32.72 17 2,669 63
11105244 SAMN14230758 JAANCB000000000 2,728,884 132 32.73 15 2,653 64
32200324 SAMN14230759 JAANCA000000000 2,777,395 126 32.76 21 2,729 68
41704653 SAMN14230760 JAANBZ000000000 2,722,996 119 32.64 18 2,661 61
41302682 SAMN14230761 JAANBY000000000 2,685,527 69 32.68 19 2,614 61
30600096 SAMN14230762 JAANBX000000000 2,723,209 44 32.67 20 2,675 57
41012475 SAMN14230763 JAANBW000000000 2,732,002 43 32.72 34 2,662 65
10602379b SAMN14230764 JAANBV000000000 2,493,911 68 35.77 25 2,445 66
31100823 SAMN14230765 JAANBU000000000 2,724,902 94 32.73 13 2,651 65
10400326 SAMN14230766 JAANBT000000000 2,640,591 111 32.61 22 2,562 58
32800326 SAMN14230767 JAANBS000000000 2,730,521 109 32.72 17 2,662 63
30704176 SAMN14230768 JAANBR000000000 2,691,107 96 32.67 18 2,621 60
11511212b SAMN14230769 JAANBQ000000000 2,295,954 106 36.62 17 2,188 64
30500174 SAMN14230770 JAANBP000000000 2,726,086 82 32.69 19 2,670 60
10303344 SAMN14230771 JAANBO000000000 2,732,341 159 32.73 13 2,663 64
30300330 SAMN14230772 JAANBN000000000 2,736,609 103 32.72 21 2,671 64
21608872 SAMN14230773 JAANBM000000000 2,763,019 121 32.64 19 2,719 61
31500081 SAMN14230774 JAANBL000000000 2,736,124 161 32.71 15 2,669 59
11700739 SAMN14230775 JAANBK000000000 2,684,650 81 32.68 16 2,615 60
11007852b SAMN14230776 JAANBJ000000000 2,457,092 134 35.65 42 2,389 65
41000044 SAMN14230777 JAANBI000000000 2,727,238 70 32.67 21 2,681 59
51000033 SAMN14230778 JAANBH000000000 2,683,716 154 32.64 21 2,619 52
31000024 SAMN14230779 JAANBG000000000 2,681,849 126 32.67 16 2,613 60
21000024 SAMN14230780 JAANBF000000000 2,729,466 61 32.71 22 2,666 62
31210331 SAMN14230781 JAANBE000000000 2,685,524 39 32.66 20 2,618 47
a

CDSs, coding sequences.

b

Staphylococcus species strain.

Data availability.

These nucleotide sequences have been deposited in DDBJ/ENA/GenBank under the accession numbers provided in Table 1. The raw sequence reads have been deposited in the NCBI Sequence Read Archive under BioProject accession number PRJNA609123.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was funded by Op+lait through a Concours Nouvelles Initiatives de Recherche grant awarded to S.D. and J.R. S.P. and D.J. received scholarship funding through the Op+lait Complements de Bourse program, as well as through the NSERC CREATE in Milk Quality program.

REFERENCES

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Data Availability Statement

These nucleotide sequences have been deposited in DDBJ/ENA/GenBank under the accession numbers provided in Table 1. The raw sequence reads have been deposited in the NCBI Sequence Read Archive under BioProject accession number PRJNA609123.


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