Author:
Nalls AV,McNulty EE,Mayfield A,Crum JM,Keel MK,Hoover EA,Ruder MG,Mathiason CK
Abstract
AbstractThe transmission of chronic wasting disease (CWD) has largely been attributed to contact with infectious prions shed in excretions (saliva, urine, feces, blood) by direct animal-to-animal exposure or indirect contact with the environment. Less-well studied has been the role mother-to-offspring transmission may play in the facile transmission of CWD. We asked whether such extensive spread may also be due to mother-to-offspring transmission, perhaps before birth. We thereby focused on a population of white-tailed deer from West Virginia, USA, in which CWD has been detected. Fetal tissues, ranging from 113 to 158 days of gestation, were harvested from the uteri of CWD+ dams in the asymptomatic phase of infection. Using serial protein misfolding amplification (sPMCA), we detected evidence of prion seeds in 6 of 14 in utero harvested fetuses, with earliest detection at 113 gestational days. This is the first report of CWD detection in free ranging white-tailed deer fetal tissues. Further investigation within cervid populations across North America will help define the role and impact of mother-to-offspring vertical transmission of CWD.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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