Laminitis is
characterized by inflammation of the sensitive laminae of the hoof, loss of
lamellar basement membrane and infiltration of mononuclear inflammatory cells
in the laminar tissue. Buffaloes commonly suffer from subclinical mastitis
resulting insidious economic losses to the farmers in terms of decreased milk
yield and weight gain and increased cost of treatment. Effective tools to treat
lameness in buffaloes are still lacking due to incomplete understanding of its
complex patho-physiology. Moreover, there is paucity of data on the in situ
localization of macrophages, pro-inflammatory cytokines, TLR-4 and TLR9 in
inflamed hoof of buffalo calf. The present study identifies immunopositive
endothelial cells, macrophages, IL8, IL-1?, TNF-? and TLR9 cells in the normal
and inflamed hoof of buffalo calves. Labeling of PIMs with the anti-human
macrophage antibody (MCA874G) demonstrated frequent occurrence of these cells
in inflamed hoof. Further, there was increased immunopositive expression of
IL8, IL-1?, TNF-? and TLR9 cells in the inflamed hoof of buffalo calf. TLR4
mRNA expression showed almost six fold significant increase (p<0.05) in the
inflamed hoof compared to normal hoof. We present first data on the
immunolocalization of macrophages, various pro-inflammatory cytokines, TLR4 and
TLR9 in the normal and inflamed hoof of buffalo calves. The data taken together
suggest that there is increase in the immunopositivity for various
pro-inflammatory cytokines along with TLR4 and TLR9 in the inflamed buffalo calf
hoof indicating that activation of TLRs may contribute significantly to the
pathogenesis of hoof inflammation in buffalo calves. - See more at:
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