Skip to main content
Article
Prevalence and Implications of Feline Coronavirus Infections of Captive and Free-Ranging Cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus)
Journal of Virology
  • J. L. Heeney, National Cancer Institute at Frederick
  • J. F. Evermann, National Cancer Institute at Frederick; Washington State University - Pullman
  • A. J. McKeirnan, Washington State University - Pullman
  • L. Marker-Kraus, Smithsonian Institution
  • M. E. Roelke, National Cancer Institute at Frederick; Florida Game and Freshwater Fish Commission
  • M. Bush, Smithsonian Institution
  • D. E. Wildt, Smithsonian Institution
  • D. G. Meltzer, Onderstepoort Veterinary Academic Hospital - Pretoria, South Africa
  • L. Colly, Johannesburg Zoological Gardens
  • J. Lukas, White Oak Plantation - Yulee, FL
  • V. J. Manton, Zoological Society of London
  • T. Caro, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
  • Stephen J. O'Brien, National Cancer Institute at Frederick; Smithsonian Institution
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-1-1990
Abstract

The extent and progression of exposure to feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) virus in the cheetah, Acinonyx jubatus, was monitored by a world-wide serological survey with indirect fluorescent antibody titers to coronavirus. The indirect fluorescent antibody assay was validated by Western blots, which showed that all indirect fluorescent antibody-positive cheetah sera detected both domestic cat and cheetah coronavirus structural proteins. There was a poor correlation between indirect fluorescent antibody results and the presence of coronaviruslike particles in cheetah feces, suggesting that electron microscopic detection of shed particles may not be an easily interpreted diagnostic parameter for FIP disease. Low, but verifiable (by Western blots [immunoblots]) antibody titers against coronavirus were detected in eight free-ranging cheetahs from east Africa as well as from captive cheetahs throughout the world. Of 20 North American cheetah facilities screened, 9 had cheetahs with measurable antibodies to feline coronavirus. Five facilities showed patterns of an ongoing epizootic. Retrospective FIP virus titers of an FIP outbreak in a cheetah-breeding facility in Oregon were monitored over a 5-year period and are interpreted here in terms of clinical disease progression. During that outbreak the morbidity was over 90% and the mortality was 60%, far greater than any previously reported epizootic of FIP in any cat species. Age of infection was a significant risk factor in this epizootic, with infants (less than 3 months old) displaying signfficantly higher risk for mortality than subadults or adults. Based upon these observations, empirical generalizations are drawn which address epidemiologic concerns for cheetahs in the context of this lethal infectious agent.

Comments

©1990, American Society for Microbiology

ORCID ID
0000-0001-7353-8301
ResearcherID
N-1726-2015
Citation Information
J. L. Heeney, J. F. Evermann, A. J. McKeirnan, L. Marker-Kraus, et al.. "Prevalence and Implications of Feline Coronavirus Infections of Captive and Free-Ranging Cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus)" Journal of Virology Vol. 64 Iss. 5 (1990) p. 1964 - 1972 ISSN: 0022-538X
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/stephen-obrien/519/