Abstract

BackgroundPerinatal infections with feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) have long been known to be associated with cerebellar hypoplasia in kittens due to productive infection of dividing neuroblasts. FPV, like other parvoviruses, requires dividing cells to replicate which explains the usual tropism of the virus for the digestive tract, lymphoid tissues and bone marrow in older animals.ResultsIn this study, the necropsy and histopathological analyses of a series of 28 cats which died from parvovirus infection in 2013 were performed. Infections were confirmed by real time PCR and immunohistochemistry in several organs. Strikingly, while none of these cats showed cerebellar atrophy or cerebellar positive immunostaining, some of them, including one adult, showed a bright positive immunostaining for viral antigens in cerebral neurons (diencephalon). Furthermore, infected neurons were negative by immunostaining for p27Kip1, a cell cycle regulatory protein, while neighboring, uninfected, neurons were positive, suggesting a possible re-entry of infected neurons into the mitotic cycle. Next-Generation Sequencing and PCR analyses showed that the virus infecting cat brains was FPV and presented a unique substitution in NS1 protein sequence. Given the role played by this protein in the control of cell cycle and apoptosis in other parvoviral species, it is tempting to hypothesize that a cause-to-effect between this NS1 mutation and the capacity of this FPV strain to infect neurons in adult cats might exist.ConclusionsThis study provides the first evidence of infection of cerebral neurons by feline panleukopenia virus in cats, including an adult. A possible re-entry into the cell cycle by infected neurons has been observed. A mutation in the NS1 protein sequence of the FPV strain involved could be related to its unusual cellular tropism. Further research is needed to clarify this point.

Highlights

  • Perinatal infections with feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) have long been known to be associated with cerebellar hypoplasia in kittens due to productive infection of dividing neuroblasts

  • Feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) and canine parvovirus (CPV) both belong to the Protoparvovirus genus within the Parvovirinae subfamily of the Parvoviridae family of single-stranded DNA viruses [1]

  • Such productive infections of cat cerebral neurons were strikingly associated with old CPV-2 strains, which seem to infect cats while they do not circulate in dog populations anymore, and have never been identified with CPV-2a and -2b variants, nor with FPV strains [8]

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Summary

Introduction

Perinatal infections with feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) have long been known to be associated with cerebellar hypoplasia in kittens due to productive infection of dividing neuroblasts. Parvovirus genome replication takes place in the nucleus and requires cells in S phase, since it relies on host cell machinery for the formation of double-stranded replication intermediates [4, 5]. This requirement limits the tropism of FPV and CPV to highly dividing cells such as those found in the intestine, bone marrow or lymphoid tissues.

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