4.6 Article

Susceptibility of Beavers to Chronic Wasting Disease

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology11050667

Keywords

prions; chronic wasting disease; beavers; wildlife diseases

Categories

Funding

  1. Genome Canada
  2. Genome Alberta
  3. Alberta Prion Research Institute
  4. Alberta Agriculture and Forestry
  5. University of Alberta
  6. Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, the University of Alberta [RRID:SCR_019175]
  7. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)

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This study investigated the potential transmission of chronic wasting disease to beavers, finding that beavers are susceptible to various types of prion diseases, including chronic wasting disease. The beaver prion protein was found to be a good substrate for sustaining prion replication, suggesting that beavers are at risk for pathogen transfer and spillover of CWD.
Simple Summary Chronic wasting disease is increasing across the landscape, and this is threatening other wildlife species in addition to cervids. Our objective was to evaluate the possibility that chronic wasting disease could transmit to beavers. Our results indicate that beavers are susceptible to multiple types of prion diseases, including chronic wasting disease. Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a contagious, fatal, neurodegenerative prion disease of cervids. The expanding geographical range and rising prevalence of CWD are increasing the risk of pathogen transfer and spillover of CWD to non-cervid sympatric species. As beavers have close contact with environmental and food sources of CWD infectivity, we hypothesized that they may be susceptible to CWD prions. We evaluated the susceptibility of beavers to prion diseases by challenging transgenic mice expressing beaver prion protein (tgBeaver) with five strains of CWD, four isolates of rodent-adapted prions and one strain of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. All CWD strains transmitted to the tgBeaver mice, with attack rates highest from moose CWD and the 116AG and H95+ strains of deer CWD. Mouse-, rat-, and especially hamster-adapted prions were also transmitted with complete attack rates and short incubation periods. We conclude that the beaver prion protein is an excellent substrate for sustaining prion replication and that beavers are at risk for CWD pathogen transfer and spillover.

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