RESUMEN
INTRODUCTION: Feline calicivirus (FCV) commonly causes upper respiratory tract, oral and ocular infections in species of the family Felidae, with high prevalence amongst domestic cat (Felis catus) populations worldwide. Detection of FCV-specific antibodies in serum provides evidence of previous infection with FCV and an indication of whether a cat may be protected against clinical FCV disease. This study describes the most extensive sampling for anti-FCV antibodies in feral and stray cat populations in Australia, and examines variation in prevalence associated with cat age, sex and location. METHODS: Blood samples were opportunistically collected from 669 feral, stray or Indigenous community cats from the Northern Territory, South Australia, Victoria, south-east Tasmania and south-west New South Wales. The sera were harvested and tested for antibodies capable of neutralising the FCV vaccine strain F9 by serum-virus neutralisation assay. RESULTS: Of the 669 cats tested, 69.7% had detectable FCV-F9-neutralising antibodies (titres ≥5). Maturity was significantly associated with higher seroprevalence and higher antibody titres, with adult cats being more than twice as likely to have detectable FCV-neutralising antibodies than subadults. Male cats had a higher seroprevalence and slightly higher antibody titres than females. Cats living in closer proximity to humans had significantly higher seroprevalences and higher FCV-neutralising antibody titres than feral cats from more remote regions of Australia. CONCLUSION: Australian feral and stray cats have a high risk of natural exposure to and infection with FCV, with the prevalence and levels of pre-existing immunity to FCV being highest amongst adult cats living in highly modified urban, peri-urban and agricultural environments.
RESUMEN
An unusual coccidian parasite was described previously from the prostate of a male Antechinus flavipes (family: Dasyuridae; common name: yellow-footed antechinus). Morphometrics and a partial nuclear 18S small subunit rDNA (18S rDNA) sequence were used to assign this parasite to the genus Eimeria; it was named Eimeria taggarti. We generated full nuclear 18S rDNA and mitochondrial genome sequences from this parasite and used the newly completed 18S rDNA and mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) sequences to perform a more in-depth phylogenetic analysis. The parasite clustered closely with Choleoeimeria spp. and Acroeimeria spp. infecting herptiles in a well-supported clade that was the sister lineage to the Eimeriidae sensu stricto. The mitochondrial genome of this parasite contained 2 inverted segments compared to mitochondrial genomes from parasites in the Eimeriidae sensu stricto (i.e., Stieda body-possessing coccidia with 4 dizoic sporocysts); this mitochondrial genome arrangement was shared with the only Choleoeimeria species for which sequence data were available publicly. Examination of histological preparations and TEM images uncovered bivalvate sporocysts and otherwise confirmed previously described morphological features of the parasite. Based on our phylogenetic analyses and histological observations, we propose the generic reclassification of E. taggarti to Choleoeimeria taggarti n. comb.
Asunto(s)
Coccidiosis/veterinaria , Eimeriidae/genética , Genoma Mitocondrial/genética , Marsupiales/parasitología , Próstata/parasitología , Animales , Coccidiosis/parasitología , ADN Protozoario/química , ADN Ribosómico/química , Eimeriidae/clasificación , Eimeriidae/aislamiento & purificación , Eimeriidae/ultraestructura , Complejo IV de Transporte de Electrones/genética , Masculino , Anotación de Secuencia Molecular , Oocistos/ultraestructura , Filogenia , Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa , ARN Protozoario/genética , ARN Ribosómico 18S/genética , Alineación de SecuenciaRESUMEN
A novel coccidian species was discovered in the prostate of an Antechinus flavipes (yellow-footed antechinus) in South Australia during the period of postmating male antechinus immunosuppression and mortality. This novel coccidian is unusual because it develops extraintestinally and sporulates endogenously within the prostate gland of its mammalian host. Histological examination of prostatic tissue revealed dense aggregations of spherical and thin-walled tetrasporocystic, dizoic, sporulated coccidian oocysts within tubular lumina, with unsporulated oocysts and gamogonic stages within the cytoplasm of glandular epithelial cells. This coccidian was observed occurring concurrently with dasyurid gammaherpesvirus 1 infection of the antechinus' prostate. Eimeria-specific 18S small-subunit ribosomal (r)DNA polymerase chain reaction amplification was used to obtain a partial 18S rDNA nucleotide sequence from the antechinus coccidian. Bayesian phylogenetic analysis based on 18S rDNA gene sequences revealed that the novel coccidian clusters with reptile-host coccidians, forming an ancestral basal lineage of the eimeriid clade. The species has been named Eimeria taggarti n. sp. on the basis of both sporulated oocyst morphology and molecular characterization. It is suspected that E. taggarti is sexually transmitted via excretion of sporulated oocysts or free sporocysts with prostatic secretions in semen.