1. Simian Betaretrovirus Infection in a Colony of Cynomolgus Monkeys (Macaca fascicularis)
- Author
-
Fujiomto, Koji, Takano, Jun-ichiro, Narita, Toyoko, Hanari, Koji, Shimozawa, Nobuhiro, Sankai, Tadashi, Yosida, Takashi, Terao, Keiji, Kurata, Takeshi, and Yasutomi, Yasuhiro
- Subjects
Male ,Macaca fascicularis ,Pregnancy ,Nonhuman Primate Models ,Animals ,RNA, Viral ,Female ,Viremia ,Betaretrovirus - Abstract
Of the 419 laboratory-bred cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) in a breeding colony at our institution, 397 (95%) exhibited antibodies or viral RNA (or both) specific for simian betaretrovirus (SRV) in plasma. Pregnant monkeys (n = 95) and their offspring were tested to evaluate maternal–infant infection with SRV. At parturition, the first group of pregnant monkeys (n = 76) was antibody-positive but RNA-negative, the second group (n = 14 monkeys) was positive for both antibody and RNA, and the last group (n = 5) was antibody-negative but RNA-positive. None of the offspring delivered from the 76 antibody-positive/RNA-negative mothers exhibited viremia at birth. Eight of the offspring (including two newborns delivered by caesarian section) from the 14 dually positive mothers exhibited SRV viremia, whereas the remaining 6 newborns from this group were not viremic. All of the offspring (including 2 newborns delivered by caesarian section) of the 5 antibody-negative/RNA-positive mothers exhibited viremia at birth. One neonatal monkey delivered by CS and two naturally delivered monkeys that were viremic at birth remained viremic at 1 to 6 mo of age and lacked SRV antibodies at weaning. Family analysis of 2 viremic mothers revealed that all 7 of their offspring exhibited SRV viremia, 6 of which were also antibody-negative. The present study demonstrates the occurrence of transplacental infection of SRV in viremic dams and infection of SRV in utero to induce immune tolerance in infant monkeys.
- Published
- 2010