RETROVIRIDAE. Part II- LENTIVIRUSES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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RETROVIRIDAE. Part II- LENTIVIRUSES

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Title: RETROVIRIDAE. Part II- LENTIVIRUSES


1
RETROVIRIDAE. Part II- LENTIVIRUSES
  • PETER H. RUSSELL, BVSc, PhD, FRCPath, MRCVS
  • Department of Pathology and Infectious Diseases,
    The Royal Veterinary College,
  • Royal College Street,
  • London NW1 OTU.
  • E-mail Web site

2
ObjectiveStudents should be able to
  • describe the differing immune-complex or
    dysfunction diseases associated with these
    viruses Visna Maedi and caprine
    arthritis/encephalitis virus, equine infectious
    anaemia, feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV),
    bovine immunodeficiency virus.
  • compare and contrast the diagnosis and
    pathogenesis of FIV and FeLV.

3
FELINE IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS
  • Once considered to be a major cause of
    lymphadenopathy and immunosuppression in cats,
    but now field work shows this is untrue. The
    virus is neither a death sentence to cats. Nor
    zoonotic.

4
Pathogenesis and clinical signs
5
1)Regressive transient infection with no CD4
decline - subclinical, most UK cases.
6
2) Typical, progressive CD4 decline, 3 idealised
stages
  • Stage 1. High circulating virus for 1-10 weeks.
    Lymphoid depletion as a result of virus infection
    and destruction of double positive CD4CD8 Tcells.
    Thymic aplasia (most important in kittens).
  • Stage 2. Asymptomatic carrier stage with a
    decrease in circulating virus effected by CD8
    cells and polyclonal antibody. Paracortical T
    cells and lymphoid follicles expand in lymph
    nodes, spleen and thymus, this may be visible as
    white nodules.

7
3)Rapidly progressing infection with high virus
and rapid depletion of CD4 cells in 40 of cats
after vaginal exposure
8
Clinical signs of virulent viruses
  • Weight loss, pyrexia, anaemia, stomatitis,
    abortion, chronic rhinitis, recurrent cystitis,
    vomiting, recurrent skin infections, diarrhoea,
    abnormally high level of B cell lymphomas - in
    combinations but not all together.

9
Control
  • No vaccine. Early experimental vaccines
    exacerbated disease. If a cat is healthy and
    positive get a confirmatory test done at Glasgow.
    If the cat is positive then keep it isolated.
    Addie now considers the cats protection league's
    policy of killing any healthy ELISA positive cat
    to be unnecessary.

10
BOVINE IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS
  • MAFF consider it to be absent from UK and of
    little clinical relevance.

11
VISNA-MAEDI VIRUS (V-M V)(or Maedi-Visna)
  • The virus Isolates are neurotropic or
    pneumotropic and cause chronic wasting disease in
    sheep. Variants which escape neutralisation
    arise during the infection (as with HIV and
    Equine Anaemia Virus). Visna Icelandic for
    wasting Maedi Icelandic for dyspnoea.

12
Immunity and epidemiology
  • Infected animals remain carriers. Transmission
    is via aerosol, milk, or colostrum. The crowded
    6 month winter housing as practised in Iceland
    allowed spread not only of V-MV but also of
    Johne's disease and SPA.
  • Infection was introduced into the UK by French
    exotic breeds and carriers occur in one third of
    flocks containing imported sheep (particularly
    Texel).

13
CAPRINE ARTHRITIS/ENCEPHALITIS VIRUS
  • This is caused by a distinct virus which is
    serologically related to V-MV but has antigenic
    and genetic differences in its envelope. It
    causes an encephalitis of kids or an insidious
    polyarthritis of adults.

14
EQUINE INFECTIOUS ANAEMIA (EIA) (Swamp fever)
  • EIA is an exotic type III immune-complex
    haemolytic disease of horses of great importance
    in the USA. The disease is notifiable in the UK.

15
Immunity and epidemiology
  • Animals can be virus-carriers for several years
    despite having antibody. Transmission is by the
    mechanical transfer of leucocytes via mosquitoes,
    flies, syringe-needles, semen and milk.

16
Control
  • UK. Horses can only be imported from virus-free
    premises. However EIA is widespread in damp
    areas of Germany and Italy and so could enter the
    UK.

17
Summary of both lectures
  • The retroviruses all contain RT and all integrate
    and mutate, but do not cause acute disease. This
    replication results in latency and persistence
    and chronic diseases eg tumours,
    immunosuppression and immune complex disease.
  • FeLV, but not FIV, is the most important
    immunosuppressive viral diseases of cats in the
    UK and suspect cats are blood tested for antigen.

18
Summary of both lectures(cont.)
  • The viruses are labile and cell associated and so
    close contact (eg in cat colonies or winter
    housed sheep), or sources of leucocytes, eg
    blood, milk and semen, transfer them
  • Vaccines are not usual except to FeLV.

19
Summary of both lectures(cont.)
  • Visna maedi virus of sheep is endemic and causes
    a T-cell based disease whereas EIA is exotic and
    causes complement-mediated haemolysis. Both
    involve bouts of variant viruses and immune
    complex disease.
  • The bovine viruses are of little importance in
    the UK to date.
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