Feline infectious peritonitis epizootic caused by a recombinant coronavirus.

Publication date: Jul 09, 2025

Cross-species transmission of coronaviruses (CoVs) poses a serious threat to both animal and human health. Whilst the large RNA genome of CoVs shows relatively low mutation rates, recombination within genera is frequently observed. Companion animals are often overlooked in the transmission cycle of viral diseases; however, the close relationship of feline (FCoV) and canine CoV (CCoV) to human hCoV-229E, as well as their susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 highlight their importance in potential transmission cycles. Whilst recombination between CCoV and FCoV of a large fragment spanning orf1b to M has been previously described, here we report the emergence of a novel, highly pathogenic FCoV-CCoV recombinant responsible for a rapidly spreading outbreak of feline infectious peritonitis (FIP), originating in Cyprus. The minor recombinant region, spanning spike (S), shows 96. 5% sequence identity to the pantropic canine coronavirus NA/09. Infection has rapidly spread, infecting cats of all ages. Development of FIP appears very frequent and sequence identities of samples from cats in different districts of the island is strongly supportive of direct transmission. A near cat-specific deletion in the domain 0 of S is present in >90% of FIP cats. It is unclear as yet whether this deletion is directly associated with disease development and may be linked to a biotype switch. The domain 0 deletion and several amino acid changes in S, particularly the receptor binding domain, indicate potential changes to receptor binding and cell tropism.

Concepts Keywords
Cats Cats
Coronaviruses Ccov
Novel Coronavirus
Pathogenic Covs
Supportive Deletion
Domain
Fcov
Feline
Fip
Infectious
Large
Peritonitis
Recombinant
Shows
Transmission

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Feline infectious peritonitis
disease MESH mutation rates
disease MESH viral diseases
disease IDO susceptibility
disease MESH Infection
disease IDO cell

Original Article

(Visited 3 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *