Journal of Dairy Science (Mar 2024)
Corrigendum to “Genetic diversity and iron metabolism of Staphylococcus hominis isolates originating from bovine quarter milk, rectal feces, and teat apices” (J. Dairy Sci. 105:9995–10006)
Abstract
ABSTRACT: Staphylococcus chromogenes TA showed significantly lower growth under iron-deprived conditions, and adding an iron supplement (lactoferrin or ferritin) resulted in no improvement in growth; in contrast, growth of S. chromogenes IM was significantly recovered with ferritin iron supplementation. Only Staphylococcus hominis strains originating from quarter milk were able to significantly utilize ferritin as an iron source to reverse the growth inhibition caused by chelating agent 2,2ʹ-bipyridyl in varying degrees. Both S. chromogenes strains (IM and TA) and all S. hominis strains were unable to significantly use lactoferrin as an iron source for growth recovery.