4.5 Article

A Serodiagnostic IgM ELISA to Detect Acute Cytauxzoonosis

Journal

PATHOGENS
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11101183

Keywords

cytauxzoonosis; Cytauxzoon felis; domestic cats; diagnostic assay; ELISA; serology

Categories

Funding

  1. Oklahoma State University College of Veterinary Medicine Research Development Seed Grant Fund
  2. Oklahoma Center for Respiratory and Infectious Diseases (OCRID)

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Cytauxzoonosis is a tick-borne infectious disease that affects domestic cats and has high mortality rates. This study developed an ELISA test to detect and differentiate acute and chronic infections. The C. felis IgM ELISA showed promise in detecting acute cytauxzoonosis, but combined interpretation with IgG ELISA was not reliable in distinguishing acute and chronic infections.
Cytauxzoonosis is a tick-borne infectious disease affecting domestic cats with high mortality and limited treatment modalities. Because early diagnosis and therapeutic intervention are crucial to survival of infected cats, the objective of this study was to develop an ELISA capable of detecting cytauxzoonosis and differentiating acute vs. chronic infection in clinical feline blood samples. A microsphere immunoassay (MIA) was developed to evaluate the production of Cytauxzoon felis-specific IgM and IgG antibodies in serial plasma samples from cats with experimental C. felis infection by targeting a C. felis-specific transmembrane protein (c88). Recombinant c88 protein was utilized to develop indirect ELISAs to detect IgM and IgG antibodies in clinical plasma samples from: PCR-positive cats with acute C. felis infection (n = 36), C. felis-negative cats with pyrexia (n = 10), healthy C. felis-negative cats (n = 22), and chronic C. felis carriers (n = 4). Anti-c88 IgM antibodies were detectable at day 12 post-tick infestation in cats with experimental C. felis infection (within 24 hours of developing clinical signs), while anti-c88 IgG was detectable at day 15 post-tick infestation - indicating IgM could be used to detect early infection. Using a cut-off value of 19.85 percent positive, the C. felis IgM ELISA detected acute cytauxzoonosis in 94.44% (34/36) of cats presented with clinical signs of acute cytauxzoonosis with 100% specificity (indicating a Strong Positive result). When a lower cutoff of 8.60 percent positive was used, cytauxzoonosis was detected in the 2 remaining PCR-positive cats with 87.88% specificity (indicating of a Weak Positive result). One C. felis-negative, febrile cat had high IgG, and chronic carriers had variable IgM and IgG results. Combined interpretation of IgM and IgG ELISAs did not reliably differentiate acute vs. chronic infection. While further validation on assay performance is needed, the C. felis IgM ELISA is a promising test to detect acute cytauxzoonosis and can be utilized to develop a point-of-care test for clinical use.

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