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检测白尾鹿感染慢性消瘦病朊病毒后的气味特征。

Biodetection of an odor signature in white-tailed deer associated with infection by chronic wasting disease prions.

机构信息

Department of Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States of America.

School of Natural Resources, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2024 Aug 7;19(8):e0303225. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303225. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) has become a major concern among those involved in managing wild and captive cervid populations. CWD is a fatal, highly transmissible spongiform encephalopathy caused by an abnormally folded protein, called a prion. Prions are present in a number of tissues, including feces and urine in CWD infected animals, suggesting multiple modes of transmission, including animal-to-animal, environmental, and by fomite. CWD management is complicated by the lack of practical, non-invasive, live-animal screening tests. Recently, there has been a focus on how the volatile odors of feces and urine can be used to discriminate between infected and noninfected animals in several different species. Such a tool may prove useful in identifying potentially infected live animals, carcasses, urine, feces, and contaminated environments. Toward this goal, dogs were trained to detect and discriminate CWD infected individuals from non-infected deer in a laboratory setting. Dogs were tested with novel panels of fecal samples demonstrating the dogs' ability to generalize a learned odor profile to novel odor samples based on infection status. Additionally, dogs were transitioned from alerting to fecal samples to an odor profile that consisted of CWD infection status with a different odor background using different sections of gastrointestinal tracts. These results indicated that canine biodetectors can discriminate the specific odors emitted from the feces of non-infected versus CWD infected white-tailed deer as well as generalizing the learned response to other tissues collected from infected individuals. These findings suggest that the health status of wild and farmed cervids can be evaluated non-invasively for CWD infection via monitoring of volatile metabolites thereby providing an effective tool for rapid CWD surveillance.

摘要

慢性消耗性疾病(CWD)已成为管理野生和圈养鹿种群的相关人员关注的主要问题。CWD 是一种致命的、高度传染性的海绵状脑病,由一种异常折叠的蛋白质(称为朊病毒)引起。朊病毒存在于多种组织中,包括感染 CWD 的动物的粪便和尿液中,这表明存在多种传播途径,包括动物-动物、环境和媒介物。CWD 的管理变得复杂,因为缺乏实用的、非侵入性的、活体动物筛查测试。最近,人们关注的焦点是粪便和尿液中的挥发性气味如何用于区分几种不同物种中感染和未感染的动物。这样的工具可能有助于识别潜在感染的活体动物、尸体、尿液、粪便和受污染的环境。为此,研究人员在实验室环境中训练狗来检测和区分感染和未感染的鹿。研究人员使用新的粪便样本面板对狗进行了测试,证明了狗能够根据感染状态将学习到的气味特征概括到新的气味样本中。此外,狗从对粪便样本的警报过渡到由不同胃肠道部分组成的基于感染状态的气味特征,从而将气味特征从感染的气味转变为感染的气味。这些结果表明,犬生物探测器可以区分非感染和 CWD 感染白尾鹿粪便发出的特定气味,并且可以将学习到的反应概括到从感染个体收集的其他组织。这些发现表明,可以通过监测挥发性代谢物对野生和养殖鹿科动物的健康状况进行非侵入性评估,从而为快速进行 CWD 监测提供有效的工具。

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