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Reduction of Chronic Wasting Disease Prion Seeding Activity following Digestion by Mountain Lions

Chase Baune, Lisa L. Wolfe, Kristen C. Schott, Karen A. Griffin, Andrew G. Hughson, Michael W. Miller, Brent Race

2021mSphere15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

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.

Topics & Concepts

Chronic wasting diseaseFecesBiologyCaptivityPredationRodentZoologyPredatorDiseaseVirologyPrion proteinPhysiologyMicrobiologyEcologyScrapieMedicinePathologyPrion Diseases and Protein Misfolding
Reduction of Chronic Wasting Disease Prion Seeding Activity following Digestion by Mountain Lions | Litcius