Establishment of an indirect ELISA for Feline Coronavirus Antibody Detection and Serotype Discrimination.

Publication date: Jul 13, 2025

Feline coronavirus (FCoV) is a highly contagious pathogen that is endemic to feline populations and is classified into two serotypes, I and II. Current diagnostic techniques are insufficient for distinguishing between these serotypes, which impedes effective surveillance and prevention efforts. In response to this limitation, we have developed an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) utilizing recombinant nucleocapsid (N) protein for the broad detection of FCoV, alongside receptor-binding domain (RBD) proteins specific to serotypes I (I-RBD) and II (II-RBD) for the purpose of serotype differentiation. The assay underwent systematic optimization, achieving high sensitivity (with detection limits of 1:64,000 dilution for N and I-RBD, and 1:32,000 for II-RBD) and specificity, exhibiting no cross-reactivity with feline calicivirus (FCV), feline herpesvirus (FHV), or feline parvovirus (FPV). The reproducibility of the assay was validated, with intra- and inter-assay coefficients of variation remaining below 10%. Clinical validation conducted on 123 feline serum samples indicated a seroprevalence of 73. 17%, with the serotype distribution comprising 91. 11% serotype I, 1. 11% serotype II, 2. 22% mixed infections, and 5. 56% cases that could not be typed. This ELISA represents a rapid, cost-effective, and field-deployable method for large-scale FCoV surveillance and serotyping, thereby contributing to enhanced feline health management and epidemiological research.

Concepts Keywords
Elisa antibody detection
Herpesvirus ELISA
Recombinant Feline coronavirus
Systematic serotype discrimination

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease IDO pathogen
disease IDO assay
disease IDO protein
drug DRUGBANK Famciclovir
disease MESH mixed infections

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