Laboratory of Persistent Viral Diseases, Rocky Mountain Laboratories, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Hamilton, Montana, USA.
Colorado Division of Parks and Wildlife, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA.
mSphere. 2021 Dec 22;6(6):e0081221. doi: 10.1128/msphere.00812-21. Epub 2021 Dec 8.
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a transmissible prion disease first observed in the 1960s in North America. This invariably fatal disease affects multiple cervid species in the wild and in captivity. In addition to the several known transmission pathways involving cervid host species, prions have been detected in the feces of crows and coyotes after consumption of experimentally spiked tissues. This raises questions about the role of cervid consumers in the perpetuation of CWD. Mountain lions have been shown to preferentially select CWD-infected prey and are also apparently resistant to infection. In this study, two captive mountain lions were fed ground mule deer muscle tissue spiked with brain-derived CWD prions, and lion feces were collected for 1 week afterward. The input brain and resulting fecal materials were analyzed using the highly sensitive real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) assay to quantify prion seeding activity. We recovered only 2.8 to 3.9% of input CWD prions after passage through the mountain lions' gastrointestinal tracts. Interestingly, CWD prions were shed only in the first defecation following consumption. Our data support the possibility that mountain lions feeding upon infected carcasses could excrete CWD prions in their feces over a short period of time but also suggest that most of the ingested prions are eliminated or sequestered by this large predator. CWD prions appear to spread naturally among susceptible cervid species in captivity and in the wild. A better understanding of all the ways these prions move, persist, and subsequently infect target species through the environment is critical to developing comprehensive disease control strategies. In our study, we show limited, transient pass-through of CWD prions in an apex predator, the mountain lion, using the highly sensitive RT-QuIC assay on feces collected after lions were fed prion-spiked muscle tissue. Prions were detected in feces only in the first defecation after exposure. Moreover, the amount of CWD prions recovered in feces was reduced by >96% after passing through the lion digestive system. This indicates that mountain lions may have some potential to distribute CWD prions within their home ranges but that they also effectively eliminate most of the CWD prions they consume.
慢性消耗病(CWD)是一种可传播的朊病毒疾病,于 20 世纪 60 年代首次在北美发现。这种疾病对野生和圈养的多种鹿科动物具有致命性影响。除了几种已知的涉及鹿科宿主物种的传播途径外,在食用经过实验性污染的组织后,乌鸦和郊狼的粪便中也检测到了朊病毒。这引发了关于鹿科消费者在慢性消耗病持续传播中的作用的问题。山狮已经被证明优先选择感染 CWD 的猎物,而且显然对感染具有抵抗力。在这项研究中,两只圈养的山狮被喂食含有大脑来源的 CWD 朊病毒的地面骡鹿肌肉组织,然后在之后的一周内收集狮子的粪便。将输入的大脑和由此产生的粪便材料使用高度敏感的实时震颤诱导转换(RT-QuIC)检测进行分析,以量化朊病毒播种活性。我们仅从山狮的胃肠道中回收了 2.8%至 3.9%的输入 CWD 朊病毒。有趣的是,只有在食用后第一次排便时才会排出 CWD 朊病毒。我们的数据支持这样一种可能性,即食用受感染尸体的山狮可能会在短时间内在粪便中排出 CWD 朊病毒,但也表明这种大型捕食者会排出或隔离大部分摄入的朊病毒。CWD 朊病毒似乎在圈养和野外的易感鹿科物种中自然传播。更好地了解这些朊病毒在环境中移动、持续存在并随后感染目标物种的所有方式,对于制定全面的疾病控制策略至关重要。在我们的研究中,我们使用高度敏感的 RT-QuIC 检测,对喂食了含有朊病毒的肌肉组织的狮子的粪便进行检测,结果显示在顶级捕食者山狮中,CWD 朊病毒的传递是有限的、短暂的。只有在暴露后的第一次排便中才能检测到朊病毒。此外,在通过狮子的消化系统后,粪便中回收的 CWD 朊病毒数量减少了超过 96%。这表明,山狮可能具有在其领地内传播 CWD 朊病毒的潜力,但它们也有效地消除了它们所消耗的大部分 CWD 朊病毒。