Abstract

Canine parvovirus (CPV) emerged in 1978 an a new pathogen of dogs, which spread around the world and now appears endemic in the domesticated and wild dog populations in all countries. CPV is over 98% identical in DNA sequence to viruses which had been known for many years in cats, mink and raccoons, and genetic analysis has revealed that the differences in canine host range are determined by a small number of changes in the capsid protein gene. Comparison of the atomic structures of the CPV and FPV capsids shows that the changes affecting host range and virus-specific antigenic sites are exposed on the capsid surface in three different positions within a raised region at the threefold axis of symmetry, which is also the site of major antigenic determinants on the capsid. Three types of CPV have been defined by antigenic analysis with monoclonal antibodies. The original CPV strain (called CPV type-2) was only present in nature for a few years, and by 1981 it had been largely replaced in nature by a variant of CPV (CPV type 2a), which in turn replaced between 1984 and 1990 by a further variant (CPV type-2b). Those viruses differed by less than 0.2% of their genome sequences, but in each case the replacement apparently occurred on a global scale. The true ancestry of CPV is not clear, but the apparent emergence of the new types of CPV and its subsequent evolution suggest that this is a useful model for the emergence of new viruses with extended host ranges and their continuing adaptation.

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