Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research (Jun 2016)

Feline panleukopaenia virus in captive non-domestic felids in South Africa

  • Emily P. Lane,
  • Helene Brettschneider,
  • Peter Caldwell,
  • Almero Oosthuizen,
  • Desiré L. Dalton,
  • Liza du Plessis,
  • Johan Steyl,
  • Antoinette Kotze

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4102/ojvr.v83i1.1099
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 83, no. 1
pp. e1 – e8

Abstract

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An outbreak of feline panleukopaenia virus (FPLV) infection was diagnosed by pathology, electron microscopy and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in vaccinated captive-bred subadult cheetahs in South Africa. Subsequent to this disease outbreak, 12 cases of FPLV diagnosed on histology were confirmed by PCR in captive African black-footed cat, caracal, cheetah, lion, ocelot and serval. Phylogenetic analyses of the viral capsid protein gene on PCR-positive samples, vaccine and National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) reference strains identified a previously unknown strain of FPLV, present since at least 2006, that differs from both the inactivated and the modified live vaccine strains. A previously described South African strain from domestic cats and cheetahs was identified in a serval. Surveys of FPLV strains in South African felids are needed to determine the geographical and host species distribution of this virus. Since non-domestic species may be reservoirs of parvoviruses, and since these viruses readily change host specificity, the risks of FPLV transmission between captive-bred and free-ranging carnivores and domestic cats and dogs warrant further research. Keywords: feline panleukopaenia; parvovirus; felid; cheetah; vaccination

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