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Journal of Virology, September 1999, p. 7916-7921, Vol. 73, No. 9
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Interspecies Transmission of Feline
Immunodeficiency Virus from the Domestic Cat to the Tsushima Cat
(Felis bengalensis euptilura) in the Wild
Yoshiaki
Nishimura,1
Yuko
Goto,1
Kumiko
Yoneda,2
Yasuyuki
Endo,1
Takuya
Mizuno,1
Masaharu
Hamachi,3
Hiroyuki
Maruyama,3
Hirotoshi
Kinoshita,3
Susumu
Koga,3
Mitsuru
Komori,3
Seigo
Fushuku,4
Kanji
Ushinohama,4
Masao
Akuzawa,4
Toshihiro
Watari,1
Atsuhiko
Hasegawa,5 and
Hajime
Tsujimoto1,*
Department of Veterinary Internal Medicine,
Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of
Tokyo,1 and Japan Wildlife Research
Center,2 Tokyo, Fukuoka Municipal Zoo
and Botanical Garden, Fukuoka,3
Department of Veterinary Internal Medicine, Faculty of
Agriculture, University of Kagoshima,
Kagoshima,4 and Department of
Pathobiology, Nihon University School of Veterinary Medicine,
Kanagawa,5 Japan
Received 11 February 1999/Accepted 15 June 1999
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ABSTRACT |
Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) was isolated from a wild-caught
Tsushima cat (Felis bengalensis euptilura), an endangered Japanese nondomestic subspecies of leopard cat (F. bengalensis). Phylogenetic analysis of the env gene
sequences indicated that the FIV from the Tsushima cat belonged to a
cluster of subtype D FIVs from domestic cats. FIVs from both the
Tsushima cat and the domestic cat showed similar levels of replication
and cytopathicity in lymphoid cell lines derived from these two
species. The results indicated the occurrence of interspecies
transmission of FIV from the domestic cat to the Tsushima cat in the wild.
 |
TEXT |
Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV)
is a causative agent of AIDS-like disease and immunological
abnormalities in domestic cats (Felis catus) that are
similar to those caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in
humans (1, 25, 26). FIV isolates have been classified into
five distinct subtypes: A, B, C, D, and E (10, 16, 21-24).
Subtypes B and D are the two major subtypes that are distributed
throughout the northeastern and southwestern districts of Japan
(16). Other FIV-related lentiviruses detected in nondomestic
wild cats, including the puma (Puma concolour), lion
(Panthera leo), and Pallas's cat (F. manul), are
known to be distantly related to FIVs of domestic cats by phylogenetic
analyses (2-4, 11, 20).
A Tsushima cat (Felis bengalensis euptilura) that was
captured in the forest of Tsushima Island for the purpose of breeding in a zoo was found to be positive for FIV antibody. The Tsushima cat is
an endangered wild cat discovered in Japan in recent years, a local
form of the Siberian subspecies of the leopard cat (F. bengalensis). It inhabits busy forest edges and paddy fields near the coast of Tsushima Island off the Japanese mainland. It is larger
than the continental subspecies but smaller than another Japanese
subspecies (F. bengalensis iriomotensis). Its population size is between 70 and 90 individuals. Therefore, this subspecies of
leopard cats seems to be a relic population that separated from other
leopard cats long ago (14).
In this study, the Tsushima cat virus was analyzed phylogenetically to
help explain the origin and transmission of FIV or FIV-related
lentiviruses. Furthermore, the growth and cytopathicity of the virus
from the Tsushima cat and FIV from the domestic cat were examined in
lymphoid cell lines from both species.
Virus isolation from the FIV-positive Tsushima cat.
At the
serum examinations immediately upon capture, the wild-caught Tsushima
cat was positive for FIV antibody and negative for feline leukemia
virus (FeLV) antigen in serological tests using a commercial test kit
(SnapTM; IDEXX, Portland, Maine). After capture, the Tsushima cat was
kept in a special facility in Fukuoka Municipal Zoo and Botanic Garden,
completely isolated from any other animals, including domestic cats.
Hematological examination of the Tsushima cat revealed a lymphocyte
count of 1,480/µl, which was within the range of four previously
examined healthy Tsushima cats (1,400 to 3,000/µl). A
CD8+ cell count, determined by using a monoclonal antibody
against cat lymphocytes (Southern Biotechnology, Birmingham, Ala.), for the Tsushima cat was 435/µl, which was similar to the values in previously examined healthy Tsushima cats. A CD4+ cell
count could not be determined because a monoclonal antibody against
feline CD4 (Southern Biotechnology) did not react with lymphocytes of
the Tsushima cat.
For virus isolation, a Tsushima cat-derived lymphoid cell line, PIPP-I,
was established from a zoo-kept Tsushima cat that was seronegative for
FIV, FeLV, and other common pathogens in domestic cats. The cytochrome
b sequence from the PIPP-I cell line was amplified by PCR
with primers described previously (14), and the sequence
indicated that the cell line originated from a Tsushima cat. The PIPP-I
cell line stained positively with monoclonal antibodies against CD8,
CD9 (MM2/57; Southern Biotechnology), and interleukin-2 receptor alpha
(9F23) in flow cytometric analyses (18). A feline
CD4+ T-lymphoid cell line, Kumi-1 (7), was also
used for virus isolation. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC)
were obtained from the seropositive Tsushima cat. The cells were
suspended in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum
and were stimulated with 10 µg of concanavalin A per ml for 3 days in
the presence of 100 U of human recombinant interleukin-2 (Pharma
Biotechnologie, Hannover, Germany) per ml. The Tsushima cat lymphoid
cells were cocultivated with PIPP-I cells or Kumi-1 cells 30 days after
initiation of the culture. Reverse transcriptase (RT) assay as
described previously (19) showed an increase in Mg-dependent
RT activities in the culture supernatants of cocultures of PIPP-I and
Kumi-1 cells by 20 to 30 days after initiation of cocultivation. The RT-positive culture supernatants from the lymphocyte cocultures of
PIPP-I cells and Kumi-1 cells were frozen at
80°C as virus stocks
designated Feu-P and Feu-K, respectively.
Sequence analyses of viruses isolated from the Tsushima cat and
FIVs from domestic cats from Tsushima Island.
For the analysis of
proviral DNA of FIV or FIV-related lentivirus, high-molecular-weight
DNAs were extracted from primary PBMC that were obtained from the
Tsushima cat seropositive for FIV antibody and the cocultures with
either PIPP-I or Kumi-1 cells. These DNA samples were used for nested
PCR amplification of the FIV env gene spanning regions V3 to
V6. The nested PCR primers used in this study were described in our
previous paper (17). PCR products were directly cloned into
a cloning vector (TA cloning kit; Invitrogen, San Diego, Calif.) and
sequenced by using the dideoxy chain termination method. Alignments of
the deduced amino acid sequences of 9 viral genomes obtained from the
primary PBMC (Feu1, -2, and -3), coculture with PIPP-I cells (Feu4, -5, and -6), and coculture with Kumi-1 cells (Feu7, -8 and -9) were almost identical, showing only 1 to 23 nucleotide substitutions in the 624-bp
fragment. The proviral sequences from the Tsushima cat showed
relatively high amino acid sequence similarities (82.7 to 93.8%)
with those of subtype D FIV strains previously reported and lower
sequence similarities with those of subtype A, B, and C strains of FIV
(71.6 to 80.7%) in Japan (10, 16, 17) (Fig. 1).

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FIG. 1.
Alignment of the predicted amino acid sequences of the
FIV env gene of 9 clones from a Tsushima cat (Feu1 to -9),
10 clones from domestic cats on Tsushima Island (TSU101, TSU102,
TSU104, TSU107, TSU109, TSU116, TSU202, TSU210, TSU215, and TSU226),
and 9 known FIV clones, by using the CLUSTAL W program. The FIV clones
previously reported include Fukuoka (GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession no.
D37815), Shizuoka (D37811), KUM01 (AB010405), MC2 (D67062), Sendai1
(D37813), JN-BR1 (D67052), TM2 (M59418), Yokohama (D37812), and AIC01
(AB010395). Asterisks denote amino acid identity with the Feu1 strain.
The horizontal lines above the sequence indicate the locations of
N-linked glycosylation sites. The pluses indicate the positions of
cysteine residues. The dashes represent gaps introduced for optimal
alignment. The thick bars under the alignment indicate the positions of
the variable regions V3 to V5 as defined by Pancino et al.
(21).
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Furthermore, for the purpose of the investigation of the origin and
transmission of FIV, blood samples were collected from
50 stray
domestic cats from two villages on Tsushima Island, A
and B, near the
forest where the seropositive Tsushima cat was
captured. Serum
samples from the domestic cats showed a high frequency
(11 of 51, or
21.6%) of positive results for antibodies against
FIV. From the
primary PBMC samples obtained from 10 domestic cats
seropositive for
FIV antibody, the proviral sequences of FIV were
sequenced after nested
PCR amplification of the
env gene fragment.
All 10 strains
obtained from the domestic cats from Tsushima Island
(TSU101, TSU102,
TSU104, TSU107, TSU109, and TSU116 strains obtained
in village A and
TSU202, TSU210, TSU215, TSU226, and TSU226 strains
obtained in village
B) had sequences that were highly similar
to those of subtype D FIVs as
well as to those from the Tsushima
cat obtained in this study (Fig.
1).
To rule out the possibility
of contamination by PCR products, we
carried out three independent
PCR amplifications for each of the DNA
templates obtained from
Tsushima cat-derived and domestic cat-derived
samples and obtained
almost the same results. Control PCR amplification
without template
DNA did not generate any amplified
product.
Phylogenetic analyses for the proviral DNA sequences.
Nucleotide divergences for pairs of sequences were estimated by using
the neighbor-joining method in the DNADIST program from the PHYLIP
software package (5). A phylogenetic tree constructed with
the nucleotide sequences spanning the V3 to the V5 region of the FIV
env gene was constructed by using the NEIGHBOR program, and
the branching order reliability was evaluated by using bootstrap analysis in the SEQBOOT program (5). All of the proviral DNA sequences from the Tsushima cat (Feu1 to -9), from domestic cats in
village A (TSU101, TSU102, TSU104, TSU107, TSU109, and TSU116), and
those in village B (TSU202, TSU210, TSU215, and TSU226) belonged to the
subtype D FIVs of domestic cats, with high bootstrap values (Fig.
2). Feu1 to -3 clones obtained from the
Tsushima cat primary PBMC and Feu4 to -9 clones obtained from
cocultures with PIPP-I and Kumi-1 cells clustered in the subtype D FIVs
(Fig. 2). Most of the isolates obtained from domestic cats living in
village A (TSU101, TSU104, TSU107, TSU109, and TSU116) formed another cluster. On the basis of the phylogenetic analysis, FIV could have been
transmitted to the Tsushima cat from any subtype D-infected domestic
cat. A maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree constructed by using the
DNAML program (5) supported the branching orders, showing
high bootstrap values (>70) in the unrooted neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree, with significant P values (P < 0.01) (data not shown).

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FIG. 2.
An unrooted neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree of the
FIV env gene covering variable regions V3 to V5. Nucleotide
divergences were estimated by the DNADIST program from the PHYLIP
software package (5). The phylogenic tree was constructed by
using the NEIGHBOR program, and the branching order reliability was
evaluated by bootstrap analysis in the SEQBOOT program (5).
Virus clones obtained in this study are Feu1 to -9 from the Tsushima
cat and TSU101, TSU102, TSU104, TSU107, TSU109, TSU116, TSU202, TSU210,
TSU215, and TSU226 from domestic cats on Tsushima Island. The FIV
clones previously reported are Petaluma FIV14 (GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ
accession no. M25381), TM2 (M59418), Yokohama (D37812), Shizuoka
(D37811), JN-BR1 (D67052), MC2 (D67062), MY8 (D67063), TY1 (D67064),
Sendai1 (D37813), Sendai2 (D37814), Aomori1 (D37816), Aomori2 (D37817),
Fukuoka (D37815), PPR (M36968), UK8 (X69496), Dutch19k1 (M73964),
ItalyM2 (X69501), LP3 (D84496), LP20 (D84498), TI-1, CABCpady02C
(U02392), SAP01 (AB010402), SAP02 (AB010403), SAP03 (AB010404), PTH-BM3
(AB010401), TAU01 (AB10405), TAU02 (AB10406), AIC01 (AB10396), AIC02
(AB10397), OKA01 (AB010400), KUM01 (AB010398), and KUM02 (AB010399).
The numbers at each branch point indicate the bootstrap values
(5) preserved through greater than 60 in 100 bootstrap
repetitions.
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Replication and cytopathicity of the isolates from the Tsushima
cat and the domestic cat.
To investigate the interspecies
transmission of FIV, we examined the replication and cytopathicity of
the FIVs from the Tsushima cat and from domestic cats in lymphoid cell
lines from these two species. Feu-P and Feu-K strains in the cocultures
with PIPP-I and Kumi-1 cells, respectively, were used as virus stocks
of FIV from the Tsushima cat. A strain isolated from a domestic cat
in Fukuoka in southwestern Japan (7) for use as an FIV
domestic-cat stock virus was designated reference subtype D FIV. PIPP-I
cells (106 cells/ml) in a 6-well culture plate were
inoculated with an equivalent number of virus particles (RT activity,
2,000 cpm) from the various FIV isolates. After adsorption at 37°C
for 1 h, the cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline and
cultured in fresh RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf
serum. The cells were cultured and maintained at 37°C with medium
changes every third day. RT activity in the culture supernatants and
the number of viable cells counted using trypan blue staining were
monitored after virus inoculation. All experiments were performed in
duplicate. To rule out the possibility of contamination, we carried out
the sequencing of the proviruses from the cultured cells infected with
these viral strains at the end of the cultures and confirmed that there
was no laboratory contamination of the virus strains used in this
study. In the PIPP-I cells, both Tsushima cat-derived viruses (Feu-P
and Feu-K) and domestic cat-derived virus (Fukuoka) displayed similar
growth rates as shown by an increase in culture supernatant RT starting
at 6 days after inoculation, reaching the highest levels (1 × 106 to 1.5 × 106 cpm/ml) at 12 to 18 days
after inoculation (Fig. 3A). The viable cell counts of PIPP-I cells progressively decreased in contrast to the
increase in RT activity and finally decreased to as few as 2 × 105 cells/ml (Fig. 3B). A proportion of the PIPP-I cells
producing a large amount of FIV showed shrinkage of the cells and
condensation of the nuclear chromatin, which are features
characteristic of apoptosis. The growth curve of the viruses and the
number of viable cell counts in PIPP-I cells after infection revealed
no obvious differences in these parameters between the Tsushima
cat-derived and domestic cat-derived viruses. In the Kumi-1 cells from
the domestic cat, viral growth rate and cytopathicity were essentially similar to those obtained with PIPP-I cells (data not shown). The
results indicated that the viruses from the Tsushima cat and the
domestic cat shared similar growth curves and cytopathicities in
Tsushima cat and domestic cat lymphoid cells.

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FIG. 3.
Replication of the FIV isolates and the viable cell
counts in PIPP-I cells after infection with the FIV isolates. (A)
Production of FIV as examined by RT assay of the culture supernatants
from PIPP-I cells. (B) Counts of viable PIPP-I cells. Feu-P, Tsushima
cat-derived FIV isolated by cocultivation with PIPP-I cells; Feu-K,
Tsushima cat-derived FIV isolated by cocultivation with Kumi-1 cells;
Fukuoka, domestic cat-derived FIV isolated by cocultivation with Kumi-1
cells.
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The seropositivity of FIV antibodies in stray domestic cats from
Tsushima Island was found to be very high, 21.6%, relative
to those in
mainland Japan and other countries (
6,
8,
9,
13,
29). All of
the FIV proviral genomes obtained from domestic
cats of Tsushima Island
belonged to subtype D, which is the most
common subtype on the nearby
much larger island of Kyushu. The
subtype D viruses endemic on Tsushima
Island were assumed, therefore,
to have been introduced from domestic
cats from Kyushu. Though
it is not clear when the subtype D FIV was
introduced to Tsushima
Island, there have been close relations via
traffic by sea and
air for a long time between the people living on
Kyushu and those
living on Tsushima Island. Therefore, domestic cats
infected with
subtype D FIV endemic in Kyushu could be easily
introduced to
Tsushima Island. The fact that there are only two species
belonging
to the
Felidae family would support the theory
that FIV could
have been transmitted to the Tsushima cat from any
subtype D-infected
domestic cat. We found that 16 wild-caught Tsushima
cats other
than the animals in this study were seronegative for FIV
antibody,
indicating that FIV infection is not common in the Tsushima
cat.
Moreover, many species belonging to the
Felidae family
were reported
to be infected with lentiviruses that were different from
each
other. The areas where each species lives are isolated from other
species. It is conceivable that the FIV-infected Tsushima cat
found in
this study might have accidentally come into contact
with a
seropositive domestic cat in the forest or adjacent villages;
recent
deforestation and development on Tsushima Island have eroded
the
forests that Tsushima cats inhabit, making this scenario probable.
A large part of the conservation of the rare Tsushima cat may
rest with
conservation of its environment, which serves as an
important barrier
to contact between this highly endangered species
and infectious
domestic
cats.
Domestic cats can be infected with puma and lion lentiviruses; however,
the inocula used to demonstrate these infections were
viruses isolated
by cocultivation with domestic cat PBMC and the
cat lymphoid cell line
3201 (
27,
28). In general, adaptation
of virus for other
host species has been shown to be an important
factor for interspecies
transmission. However, in the present
study, FIVs from both the
Tsushima cat and domestic cats showed
similar replicative capacities in
both PIPP-I and Kumi-1 cell
types, indicating that interspecies
transmission of FIV between
domestic cats and Tsushima cats was highly
likely. FIV-related
lentiviruses in the puma and lion apparently do not
induce any
symptomatic disease in their natural host or in
experimentally
infected domestic cats (
27). The case is
different with simian
immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection; SIV from
sooty mangabeys
induced an AIDS-like disease in Asian macaques, though
the virus
did not cause any disease in its natural host (
12,
15). Our
data indicated that FIV from the domestic cat was
cytopathic in
cells cultured from the lymphoid cells of Tsushima cats,
yet we
presently do not know whether FIV can induce disease in the
Tsushima
cat; continued observation of possible disease progression in
this FIV-infected Tsushima cat should eventually reveal the link,
or
lack of a link, between this virus and disease in this
host.
The present study is an example of interspecies transmission of a
pathogen from the domestic cat to an endangered nondomestic
cat species
in the wild. For the conservation of a diversity of
wild animal
species, it will be important to control the threat
to endangered
species from diseases carried by related domestic
species.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
Nucleotide sequences of
the FIV genome obtained in this study have been deposited in the DDBJ
database under accession no. AB02110 through AB02118.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We are grateful to H. Koyama and T. Hohdatsu (Kitasato University)
for providing the FIV Fukuoka strain and Kumi-1 cell line.
This study was supported by the Environment Agency of Japan, the Japan
Health Sciences Foundation, and grants from the Ministry of Education,
Science, Sports and Culture and the Ministry of Health and Welfare of Japan.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Veterinary Internal Medicine, Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8657, Japan. Phone: 81-3-5841-8004. Fax: 81-3-5841-8178. E-mail: atsuji{at}hongo.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp.
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Journal of Virology, September 1999, p. 7916-7921, Vol. 73, No. 9
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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