Detection of feline immunodeficiency virus in semen from seropositive domestic cats (Felis catus)

  • Jordan H
  • Howard J
  • Tompkins W
  • et al.
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Abstract

Electroejaculates from experimentally infected domestic cats were evaluated for the presence of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV). Virus was isolated from cell-free seminal plasma and seminal cells by cocultivation with a feline interleukin-2-dependent CD4+ T-cell line, in which productive infection was demonstrated by syncytium formation and FIV gag p26 antigen secretion. In addition, an 868-bp segment of the FIV gag provirus gene was identified in cocultured cells by PCR and Southern analysis. A 582-bp fragment of the FIV gag provirus genome was detected by nested PCR and Southern analysis in nonfractionated seminal cells and in sperm purified by a swim-up procedure. This is the first report describing the detection of replication-competent FIV in cell-free and cell-associated forms in domestic cat semen.

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APA

Jordan, H. L., Howard, J., Tompkins, W. A., & Kennedy-Stoskopf, S. (1995). Detection of feline immunodeficiency virus in semen from seropositive domestic cats (Felis catus). Journal of Virology, 69(11), 7328–7333. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.69.11.7328-7333.1995

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