Biology Faculty Articles
Title
FIV Cross-Species Transmission: An Evolutionary Prospective
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-15-2008
Publication Title
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology
Keywords
FIV, Lentiviruses, Cross-species transmission
ISSN
0165-2427
Volume
123
Issue/No.
1-2
First Page
159
Last Page
166
Abstract
Feline and primate immunodeficiency viruses (FIVs, SIVs, and HIV) are transmitted via direct contact (e.g. fighting, sexual contact, and mother–offspring transmission). This dynamic likely poses a behavioral barrier to cross-species transmission in the wild. Recently, several host intracellular anti-viral proteins that contribute to species-specificity of primate lentiviruses have been identified revealing adaptive mechanisms that further limit spread of lentiviruses between species. Consistent with these inter-species transmission barriers, phylogenetic evidence supports the prediction that FIV transmission is an exceedingly rare event between free-ranging cat species, though it has occurred occasionally in captive settings. Recently we documented that puma and bobcats in Southern California share an FIV strain, providing an opportunity to evaluate evolution of both viral strains and host intracellular restriction proteins. These studies are facilitated by the availability of the 2× cat genome sequence annotation. In addition, concurrent viral and host genetic analyses have been used to track patterns of migration of the host species and barriers to transmission of the virus within the African lion. These studies illustrate the utility of FIV as a model to discover the variables necessary for establishment and control of lentiviral infections in new species.
Additional Comments
National Cancer Institute contract #: N01-CO-12400
NSUWorks Citation
Troyer, Jennifer L.; Sue VandeWoude; Jill Pecon-Slattery; Carl McIntosh; Sam Franklin; Agostinho Antunes; Warren E. Johnson; and Stephen J. O'Brien. 2008. "FIV Cross-Species Transmission: An Evolutionary Prospective." Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology 123, (1-2): 159-166. https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cnso_bio_facarticles/496
ORCID ID
0000-0001-7353-8301
ResearcherID
N-1726-2015
Comments
©2008 Elsevier B.V.