| Literature DB >> 22470834 |
Stephen J O'Brien1, Jennifer L Troyer, Meredith A Brown, Warren E Johnson, Agostinho Antunes, Melody E Roelke, Jill Pecon-Slattery.
Abstract
The domestic cat is afflicted with multiple viruses that serve as powerful models for human disease including cancers, SARS and HIV/AIDS. Cat viruses that cause these diseases have been studied for decades revealing detailed insight concerning transmission, virulence, origins and pathogenesis. Here we review recent genetic advances that have questioned traditional wisdom regarding the origins of virulent Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) diseases, the pathogenic potential of Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV) in wild non-domestic Felidae species, and the restriction of Feline Leukemia Virus (FeLV) mediated immune impairment to domestic cats rather than other Felidae species. The most recent interpretations indicate important new evolutionary conclusions implicating these deadly infectious agents in domestic and non-domestic felids.Entities:
Keywords: FCoV; FIV; FeLV; Felidae
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22470834 PMCID: PMC3315214 DOI: 10.3390/v4020236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Examples of domestic cat viruses with human homologues *.
| Feline Virus | Human Homologue |
|---|---|
| Feline Leukemia Virus (FeLV) [ | Human T-Cell Leukemia Virus (HTLV) [ |
| Feline Immunodeficiency Virus (FIV) [ | Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV-AIDS) [ |
| Feline Coronavirus (FCoV) [ | SARS-Coronavirus (Severe acute respiratory syndrome) [ |
| Feline Sarcoma Virus (FSV) [ | ~20 Human Oncogenes [ |
| Avian H5N1 Influenza [ | Avian H5N1 Influenza [ |
| Feline Herpes Virus (FHV) [ | Cytomegalovirus (CMV-retinitis) |
| Feline Foamy Virus (FFV) [ | Human Foamy Virus (No pathology) [ |
| Feline Calicivirus (FCV) [ | Human Calicivirus (Diarrhea, vomiting) [ |
| Feline Parvovirus (FPV) [ | Human B19 Parvovirus (Fifth disease) [ |
| Feline Morbillivirus (CDV) [ | Human Morbillivirus (Measles) [ |
* Many references exist for each virus in both cat and human, here we provide single references as examples.
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree of cloned feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) membrane sequences (655 bp) from 19 healthy (feline enteric coronavirus (FECV); green) and 8 symptomatic (feline infectious peritonitis virus FIPV; red) cats [43]. One cat, Fca-4590, was sampled when healthy and then at death caused by FIP. Shown is the maximum likelihood tree constructed from 655 bp of the membrane gene. The number of FECV and FIP cases followed by the number of cloned sequences is indicated in parenthesis. The labels for each sequence include location W, Weller Farm; F, Frederick Animal Shelter; S, Seymour Farm; M, Mount Airy Shelter; A, Ambrose Farm), 4-digit cat identification number, tissue source (fe, feces; af, ascites fluid; co, colon; li, liver; sp, spleen; in, intestine; je, jejunum; ln, lymph node), 2-digit year (e.g., 04 = 2004), and number of clones for each sequence. Bootstrap values are shown (MP/minimum evolution/ML) above branches. Where ML tree was congruent with MP tree, branch lengths are indicated below branches; the number of homoplasies is in parenthesis after the branch length. Virus sequence obtained from cat no. 4590 in May 2004 and at the time of death due to FIP in December 2004. The transitional individual serial samples are indicated with open circles (first sample) and solid circles (second sample). Scale bar indicates substitutions/site.
Summary of FIV prevalence tested by western blot (AB) and PCR in Felidae.
| Species | Common Name | Free Ranging | Captive | Citation | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AB+ | PCR+ | AB+ | PCR+ | |||
| European wild cat | 5/125 | 0/3 | 4/13 | [ | ||
| African wild cat | 1/16 | 0/1 | [ | |||
| Chinese desert cat | ||||||
| Desert cat | 0/14 | 6/13 | 0/7 | [ | ||
| Black-footed cat | 3/11 | 0/4 | [ | |||
| Jungle cat | 5/17 | 0/6 | [ | |||
| [ | ||||||
| Rusty spotted cat | 0/1 | [ | ||||
| 0/81 | [ | |||||
| Fishing cat | 1/25 | 0/2 | [ | |||
| Flat-headed cat | 0/2 | 1/9 | [ | |||
| 45/166 | [ | |||||
| Jaguarundi | [ | |||||
| 6/242 | [ | |||||
| Iberian lynx | 7/74 | 0/75 | [ | |||
| Eurasian lynx | 0/10 | [ | ||||
| Canada lynx | 0/92 | 1/2 | 0/1 | [ | ||
| 1/8 | 0/1 | [ | ||||
| 10/88 | 0/6 | [ | ||||
| [ | ||||||
| Andean mountain cat | ||||||
| Pampas cat | 1/12 | [ | ||||
| Geoffroy's cat | 1/6 | 0/1 | 8/45 | 0/7 | [ | |
| Kodkod | 0/2 | [ | ||||
| Tigrina | 3/40 | 0/2 | [ | |||
| Caracal | 0/3 | 0/22 | [ | |||
| African golden cat | 0/2 | [ | ||||
| Serval | 0/4 | [ | ||||
| Bay cat | 0/1 | [ | ||||
| Asian golden cat | 0/1 | 3/29 | 0/2 | [ | ||
| Marbled cat | 2/10 | 0/3 | [ | |||
| 72/132 | 1/1 | [ | ||||
| Jaguar | 0/2 | 8/42 | 0/7 | [ | ||
| 1/96 | 0/1 | [ | ||||
| Tiger | 0/1 | [ | ||||
| Snow leopard | [ | |||||
| Neofelis nebulosa | Clouded leopard | 4/59 | 0/2 | [ | ||
Bold numbers = congruence between AB and PCR; shaded = free-ranging “+”; bold letters = PCR free-ranging “+” animals.
Figure 2Maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree of 72 non-identical FIV from seven carnivore species based on a region of pol-RT (420 bp) [7,58,65]. Circles indicate subtypes within FIV, FIV and FIV lineages.
Medical conditions present in HIV, SIV and FIV infections found in FIV infected wild lions compared with FIV negative lions. (Adapted from [48]).
| Medical Condition | FIV | FIV | Odds Ratio | P Value | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % Affected | # Individuals | % Affected | # Individuals | |||
| CD4 depletion | 0 | 5 | 100 | 8 | NA | 0.00015 |
| Gingivitis | 40 | 15 | 88.4 | 43 | 11.4 | 0.00016 |
| Papillomavirus | 14.3 | 14 | 53.19 | 47 | 6.82 | 0.01009 |
| Lymphadenopathy | 41.67 | 12 | 76.6 | 47 | 4.58 | 0.01900 |
| Hyperglobulinemia | 0 | 14 | 85.71 | 46 | NA | <2 × 10−9 |
| Erythrocyte sedimentation rate | 13.33 | 15 | 64.86 | 37 | 12 | 0.00076 |
| ( | ||||||
| Dehydration (> 4%) | 26.67 | 15 | 63.04 | 46 | 4.69 | 0.01408 |
| Hair and coat abnormalities | 13.3 | 15 | 52.27 | 44 | 7.12 | 0.00840 |
| Hypoalbuminemia (marker of cachexia) ( | 0 | 14 | 46.94 | 46 | NA | 0.00129 |
| Anemia ( | 11.11 | 18 | 55.77 | 52 | 10.09 | 0.00101 |
| Cachexia/unexplained weight loss | Not documented | Observed in 3 FIV+ populations | NA | NA | ||
| Histopathologic evidence: Lymphoid activation | Not documented | Yes | NA | NA | ||
| Histopathologic evidence: Lymphoid atrophy & depletion | Not documented | Yes | NA | NA | ||
Figure 3Distribution, incidence and co-infection of canine distemper virus (CDV) and FIV in Serengeti lions. (a) Map of approximate pride home ranges during the CDV outbreak in April of 1994. Distribution of FIV subtypes by pride is shown here [87,93]. (b) Comparison of survival between lions with (dark grey) and without (light grey) FIV-B. Shown here are Chi‑squared p-values. Fisher’s exact two-tailed statistics are significant all subtype configurations (p = 0.028) and approaching significant for single subtype infection (p = 0.072). (c) FIV subtype distribution over time. Lions that were alive at the beginning of the CDV outbreak (N = 91) were sampled either prior to April 1994, during the month of April 1994, or after April 1994. Most of the 1994 sampling occurred in April after the peak mortality (approximate time shown here as a grey bar). Knowledge of subtype frequencies prior to April 1994 is primarily from samples collected from those animals in previous years. These regressions are significantly different (p = 0.001).