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Genetic Basis for Species Vulnerability in the Cheetah
878
Citations
33
References
1985
Year
GeneticsReproductive BiologyMammalogyPublic HealthEvolutionary SignificanceParasitologyReproductive SuccessSouth African CheetahEvolutionary GeneticsVirologyGenetic VariationSwine VirusPopulation GeneticsZoonotic DiseaseEvolutionary BiologySpecies VulnerabilityVeterinary ScienceEmergent VirusPopulation Genetic SurveyMedicineAnimal VirusReciprocal Skin Grafts
The South African cheetah shows extreme loss of genetic variability, likely due to a recent severe bottleneck. Cheetahs exhibit genetic monomorphism—including at the MHC—leading to breeding challenges, high juvenile mortality, sperm abnormalities, and extreme susceptibility to coronavirus, underscoring the species’ vulnerability.
A population genetic survey of over 200 structural loci previously revealed that the South African cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus jubatus) has an extreme paucity of genetic variability, probably as a consequence of a severe population bottleneck in its recent past. The genetic monomorphism of the species is here extended to the major histocompatibility complex, since 14 reciprocal skin grafts between unrelated cheetahs were accepted. The apparent consequences of such genetic uniformity to the species include (i) great difficulty in captive breeding, (ii) a high degree of juvenile mortality in captivity and in the wild, and (iii) a high frequency of spermatozoal abnormalities in ejaculates. The species vulnerability of the cheetah was demonstrated by an epizootic of coronavirus-associated feline infectious peritonitis in an Oregon breeding colony in 1983. Exposure and spread of the coronavirus, which has a very low morbidity in domestic cats (approximately 1 percent), has decimated a heretofore productive and healthy captive population. The extreme genetic monomorphism, especially at the major histocompatibility complex, and the apparent hypersensitivity of the cheetah to a viral pathogen may be related, and provide a biological basis for understanding the adaptive significance of abundant genetic variation in outbred mammalian species.
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