Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How age and genetics affect cat resistance to feline infectious
By Pedersen, Niels C et al.·Published in Veterinary immunology and immunopathology·2014·School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: The influence of age and genetics on natural resistance to experimentally induced feline infectious peritonitis.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of cats was studied to understand why some develop feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) after being exposed to the virus while others do not. Out of 111 cats, 40 survived the initial exposure, but some later developed FIP after further challenges. The research found that younger cats were more susceptible, and resistance increased as they aged. Genetic testing revealed that while certain family lines showed varied resistance, no specific genes were identified as responsible for immunity. This suggests that age and genetics play a role in how cats respond to the FIP virus, but more research is needed to fully understand the factors involved.
People also search for: cat FIP symptoms · feline infectious peritonitis treatment · why is my cat sick after FIP exposure
Abstract
Naturally occurring feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) is usually fatal, giving the impression that immunity to the FIP virus (FIPV) is extremely poor. This impression may be incorrect, because not all cats experimentally exposed to FIPV develop FIP. There is also a belief that the incidence of FIP may be affected by a number of host, virus, and environmental cofactors. However, the contribution of these cofactors to immunity and disease incidence has not been determined. The present study followed 111 random-bred specific pathogen free (SPF) cats that were obtained from a single research breeding colony and experimentally infected with FIPV. The cats were from several studies conducted over the past 5 years, and as a result, some of them had prior exposure to feline enteric coronavirus (FECV) or avirulent FIPVs. The cats were housed under optimized conditions of nutrition, husbandry, and quarantine to eliminate most of the cofactors implicated in FIPV infection outcome and were uniformly challenge exposed to the same field strain of serotype 1 FIPV. Forty of the 111 (36%) cats survived their initial challenge exposure to a Type I cat-passaged field strains of FIPV. Six of these 40 survivors succumbed to FIP to a second or third challenge exposure, suggesting that immunity was not always sustained. Exposure to non-FIP-inducing feline coronaviruses prior to challenge with virulent FIPV did not significantly affect FIP incidence but did accelerate the disease course in some cats. There were no significant differences in FIP incidence between males and females, but resistance increased significantly between 6 months and 1 or more years of age. Genetic testing was done on 107 of the 111 infected cats. Multidimensional scaling (MDS) segregated the 107 cats into three distinct families based primarily on a common sire(s), and resistant and susceptible cats were equally distributed within each family. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) on 73 cats that died of FIP after one or more exposures (cases) and 34 cats that survived (controls) demonstrated four significant associations after 100k permutations. When these same cats were analyzed using a sib-pair transmission test, three of the four associations were confirmed although not with genome-wide significance. GWAS was then done on three different age groups of cases to take into account age-related resistance, and different associations were observed. The only common and strong association identified between the various GWAS case configurations was for the 34.7-45.8Mb region of chromosome A3. No obvious candidate genes were present in this region.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25265870/