n.
A retrovirus that primarily affects cats, is transmitted through saliva, and causes suppression of the immune system and anemia, leading to opportunistic infections and diseases such as leukemia and lymphoma.
| Dictionary: feline leukemia virus |
A retrovirus that primarily affects cats, is transmitted through saliva, and causes suppression of the immune system and anemia, leading to opportunistic infections and diseases such as leukemia and lymphoma.
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| Wikipedia: Feline leukemia virus |
| Feline leukemia virus | ||||||||
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Electron micrograph of Feline leukemia virus
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Feline leukemia virus (FeLV) is a retrovirus that infects cats. As a retrovirus, the genetic information of FeLV is carried by RNA instead of DNA. FeLV is usually transmitted between infected cats when the transfer of saliva or nasal secretions is involved, for example when sharing a feeding dish. If not defeated by the animal’s immune system, the virus can be lethal.
The disease is a virus, not a cancer. The name stems from the fact that the first disease associated with the virus was a form of leukemia. By the time it was discovered that the virus was not the same as leukemia, the misnomer had already found its way into the vocabulary of pet owners.
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Cats infected with FeLV can serve as sources of infection. Cats pass the virus between themselves through saliva and close contact, by biting another cat, through a litter box or food dish used by an infected cat, and from milk during nursing. Transmission can also take place from an infected mother cat to her kittens, either before they are born or while they are nursing.
The virus can survive only about 2 hours in a dry environment, and about 48 hours in a damp environment (such as a litter box)[citation needed].
FeLV causes immunosuppression in pet cats, and there is also evidence for existence of the virus in larger wild cat populations also (e.g. lynx, cheetah, and lion). Overwhelming epidemiologic evidence suggests FeLV is not transmissible to either humans or dogs. This statement is based on the fact that approximately one pet dog in five lives with a cat, and all pet cats live with humans (some 60 million pet cats in the USA). It is species-specific, and does not infect other animals, such as dogs (in fact, there is apparently no canine version of this disease at all).
Approximately 0.5% of pet cats are persistently infected with FeLV, but many more pet cats (>35%) have specific IgG antibodies which indicate prior exposure and subsequent development of immunity instead of infection. Transmission of FeLV is mainly via saliva and friendly behaviours, such as sharing feeding bowls and mutual grooming (as distinct from fighting and biting).
There is strong evidence kittens under 4 months of age are susceptible to infection, but by eight months are resistant - hence it is a good idea to keep young pet kittens indoors where virus exposure is minimal or non-existent until about 8 months of age.
Kitten can be born with it, having contracted it from their mother while "in utero". Infection is far higher in city cats, stray or owned, than in rural cats: this is entirely due to the amount of contact the cats have with each other.
The disease has a wide range of effects. The cat can fight off the infection and become totally immune, can become a healthy carrier that never gets sick itself but can infect other cats, or a mid-level case in which the cat has a compromised immune system.[citation needed]
Four subgroups of FeLV exist: A; B; C, and T, but only subgroup A is transmissible between cats. The other subgroups arise de novo and as results of recombination with an endogenous DNA feline sequence. Hence, there is very good evidence this virus is quite ancient, and may well have evolved more than one time over the last 10,000,000 years.
Subgroups are defined on the basis of viral interference and in vitro host range. The differences are due to polymorphism in the envelope glycoprotein gp70 with the highest level of divergence lying in the region of gp70 which is thought to interact with the cellular receptor. In an infected cell, gp70 is thought to block viral receptors, so preventing further infection by the same subgroup.
There are many possible outcomes as to how successfully the cat’s immune system will react to the virus. About forty percent of cats extinguish the virus. Sixteen percent fight it off due to minimal exposure to it. The other twenty-four percent resist the virus at phase four, which will be described later. All of this usually occurs between sixteen to eighteen weeks after the FeLV infection begins. About twenty percent are able to put the virus into a latent stage, in which the virus will remain until the cat becomes stressed causing the FeLV to re-emerge. About five to ten percent of cats go through a sequestered stage in which viremia is limited, intermittent, or absent altogether. Approximately thirty percent of cats go through the disease from start to finish, normally resulting in death.
Once the virus has entered the cat, there are six phases to a FeLV infection:
Cats diagnosed as persistently infected by ELISA testing may die within a few months or may remain asymptomatic for up to 4 years. The fatal diseases are leukemias, lymphomas, and non-regenerative Anemias. Although there is no known cure for the virus infection, in 2006 the United States Department of Agriculture approved Lymphocyte T-Cell Immunomodulator as a treatment aid for FeLV and/or FIV infections.
Vaccines for FeLV are available (ATCvet code QI06 and various combination vaccines), though no currently available vaccine offers 100% protection from the virus. [1] Serious side effects have also been reported as a result of FeLV vaccination; in particular, a small percentage of cats who received FeLV vaccines subsequently developed vaccine-associated sarcomas, an aggressive tumour, at the injection site. [2] The development of sarcomas with the use of the old FeLV and other vaccines may be due to the inflammation caused by aluminium adjuvants in the vaccines.[3]
Merial produces a recombinant vaccine consisting of canarypox virus carrying FeLV gag and env genes (sold as PUREVAX FeLV in the USA and Eurifel FeLV in Europe). This is thought to be safer than the old vaccine as it does not require an adjuvant to be effective. Although this is a live virus, it originates from a bird host and so does not replicate in mammals.[4]
Since the virus is very weak and dies within two hours in a dry environment, if you can keep the litterbox from remaining damp between uses, the incidence of transmission will drop considerably. One method is to clean all damp litter out of a standard box after each use; however, this is sometimes not practical.
Another option is a specialized three-part litterbox that uses either a ground corncob or safflower seed litter in a slotted top unit, which allows the liquid to drain into a reservoir that is emptied regularly. The litter material air-dries quickly, thus killing the virus quickly.
This litterbox was originally designed for diabetic cats, to allow regular testing of the sugar level in the cat's system. By coincidence, the box also helps prevent FeLV infection between household cats.
Feline Leukemia Virus (FeLV) is an RNA retrovirus or oncornavirus first described by W. Jarrett (et al., Nature 202:566) at University of Glasgow, School Veterinary Medicine, in 1964. The virus comprises 5' and 3' LTR's and three genes: Gag (structural), Pol (enzymes) and Env (envelope and transmembrane); the total genome is about 9,600 base pairs.
See the entry on retroviruses for more details on the life cycle of FeLV.
In 2006, the United States Department of Agriculture issued a conditional license for a new treatment aid termed Lymphocyte T-Cell Immune Modulator[5]. Lymphocyte T-Cell Immune Modulator is manufactured by T-Cyte Therapeutics, Inc. and exclusively licensed by IMULAN BioTherapeutics, LLC and distributed in the United States by ProLabs Animal Health (www.prolabsanimalhealth.com).
Lymphocyte T-Cell Immune Modulator is intended as an aid in the treatment of cats infected with feline leukemia virus (FeLV) and/or feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), and the associated symptoms of lymphocytopenia, opportunistic infection, anemia, granulocytopenia, or thrombocytopenia. The absence of any observed adverse events in several animal species suggests that the product has a very low toxicity profile.
Lymphocyte T-Cell Immune Modulator is a potent regulator of CD-4 lymphocyte production and function.[6] It has been shown to increase lymphocyte numbers and Interleukin 2 production in animals.[7]
Lymphocyte T-Cell Immune Modulator is a single chain polypeptide. It is a strongly cationic glycoprotein, and is purified with cation exchange resin. Purification of protein from bovine-derived stromal cell supernatants produces a substantially homogeneous factor, free of extraneous materials. The bovine protein is homologous with other mammalian species and is a homogeneous 50 kDa glycoprotein with an isoelectric point of 6.5. The protein is prepared in a lyophilized 1 microgram dose. Reconstitution in sterile diluent produces a solution for subcutaneous injection.[8]
A FeLV-positive cat may also have persistent gingivitis and other dental problems (persistent gingivitis is a prime symptom of FeLV and FIV).
Interferon-ω (omega) is sold in Europe at least under the name Virbagen Omega and manufactured by Virbac. When used in treatment of cats infected with FeLV in non-terminal clinical stages (over the age of 9 weeks) there have been substantial improvement in mortality rates; in non-anaemic cats, mortality rate of 50% was reduced by approximately 20% following treatment.[citation needed]
The drug is quite expensive dependent on body-weight, but will be covered by most pet insurers.
FeLV and Feline immunodeficiency virus are in the same family, and are sometimes mistaken for one another. However, the viruses differ in many ways. Their shapes are quite different: FeLV is more circular while FIV is elongated. The two viruses are also quite different genetically, and their protein coats differ in size and composition. Although many of the diseases caused by FeLV and FIV are similar, the specific ways in which they are caused also differs.
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