key: cord-320385-myiuhxdb authors: Peña, Laura; Garcia, Pilar; Jiménez, Ma. Ángeles; Benito, Alberto; Alenza, Ma. Dolores Pérez; Sánchez, Belén title: Histopathological and immunohistochemical findings in lymphoid tissues of the endangered Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) date: 2006-04-19 journal: Comp Immunol Microbiol Infect Dis DOI: 10.1016/j.cimid.2006.01.003 sha: doc_id: 320385 cord_uid: myiuhxdb The Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) is the most threatened wild feline in the world. Little is known about the diseases and pathology that affect this animal. The aim of this study was to evaluate the histopathological status of the peripheral lymphoid tissues and thymus of Iberian lynxes necropsied between 1998 and 2003. Seventeen animals including females (n=8) and males (n=9), age range of 10 months to 16 years, with different causes of death were histopathologically and immunohistochemically (anti-CD3, CD79, MAC387, CD68) studied. Feline immunosuppressive virus laboratorial tests were negative. Five individuals presented neoplasia and/or tuberculosis. All animals presented some degree of both B and T cells depletion in peripheral lymphoid tissues and follicular hyalinosis in the center of depleted follicles. A viral origin of the lymphoid depletion is postulated although other causes (inbreeding, stress, toxic) are not ruled out. The loss of the effectiveness of the immune system increases the vulnerability of the critically endangered Iberian lynx to pathogens. The Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) is the most threatened wild feline in the world [1] . It is considered 'critically endangered' [2] and it is located only in two small isolated metapopulations in Southern Spain, the Doñana area and Sierra Morena [3] . The progressive disappearance of these animals in the past decades has been attributed to decreases in the populations of their main prey, the rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus), due to myxomatosis, traps and hunting [4] [5] [6] . Nowadays, the Iberian lynx is threatened by the fragmentation and loss of its habitat [7] , estimating a total population under 200 individuals [3] . The conservation of this European large wild cat is of great concern to the European Union authorities who are given large amounts of funds for its conservation. The causes of 'non-natural' mortality (prompted by human intervention) of the Iberian lynx have been thoroughly studied during the past decades [8] , but there are no references of mortality by diseases or necropsy findings. Little is known about diseases and pathology that affect the Iberian lynx; there are only a few publications about tuberculosis [9] [10] [11] and parasites [12] [13] [14] in the Iberian lynx, and there are no previous reports concerning histopathological findings. The aim of this study was to evaluate the histopathological status of the peripheral lymphoid tissues and thymus of Iberian lynxes necropsied between 1998 and 2003 in relation to other pathologies found in the animals. Tissue samples fixed in neutral 10% formalin of multiple organs from Iberian lynxes necropsied, found dead or that died in captivity between 1998 and 2003, were sent for infectious agents in the dead animals was investigated from tissue samples or carcass fluids, whenever possible, by PCR or serology depending on the availability of the samples. The positive results and the corresponding method of detection are displayed on Table 1 . Formalin tissue samples were paraffin embedded, cut in 4 mm sections, deparaffined and H&E stained. A complete histopathological study was performed in each case. Ziehl-Neelsen technique for acid-fast bacilli and streptavidin-biotin-peroxidase complex anti-Mycobacterium tuberculosis (mouse monoclonal primary antibody, reacts with other members of M. tuberculosis complex, i.e. Mycobacterium bovis, Novocastra NCL-MT, 1:40, incubation overnight 4 8C; secondary antibody) were performed in the tuberculosis granulomas to locate the bacilli 'in situ'. The lymphoid tissues histologically evaluated included spleen, lymph nodes (at least three per animal; lymph nodes without granulomas were studied to establish cellular depletion in the cases with tuberculosis), MALT (respiratory and intestinal mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue) and thymus (three samples of animals aged 16, 17 months and 2 years old). Thymus involution was evaluated according to histological criteria published for the domestic cat [15] . The severity of lymphoid depletion/animal (LD) was categorized in none, mild, moderate and severe considering two variables: (a) number and type of lymphoid tissues affected and (b) grade of lymphoid depletion/tissue: normal, mild, moderate and severe ( Table 2) . Immunohistochemistry (streptavidin-biotin complex peroxidase method) was carried out on deparaffined sections after a high temperature antigen unmasking protocol (in a pressure cooker, sections were immersed in citrate buffer pH 6.0 and boiled for 2 min). The primary antibodies used were: rabbit polyclonal antibody anti-CD3, pan-T cell marker (DAKO A452, dilution 1/100, incubation overnight 4 8C); mouse monoclonal antibody anti-CD79, mature B cells marker (clone HM57, DAKO M7051, dilution 1/10, incubation overnight 4 8C); mouse monoclonal antibody clone MAC 387 myeloid/histiocyte antigen (DAKO M0747, dilution 1/200, incubation overnight 4 8C); and mouse monoclonal antibody anti-CD68 macrophage Tissue depletion was categorized in: 0Znone, 1Zmild, 2Zmoderate and 3Zsevere. a Grade of lymphoid depletion/animal was based mainly on the splenic depletion. b LN, lymph nodes; the median of the tissue depletion scores of the three lymph nodes studied (a, b, c) was considered. c MALT(R), respiratory mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues; MALT(I), intestinal mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues; when depletion was different in both tissues, the less altered one was chosen for the total scoring. Lymph nodes and MALT tissues were considered only if regional pathologies were ruled out. (clone PG-M1) (DAKO M0876, dilution 1/20, incubation overnight 4 8C). M. tuberculosis, CD79, MAC387 and CD68 sections were subsequently incubated with anti-mouse biotinylated secondary antibody (Dako E04233, dilution 1:200, 30 min at room temperature). CD3 sections were subsequently incubated with with anti-rabbit biotinylated secondary antibody (Vector Laboratories BA1000, 1:400, 30 min at room temperature). Next, all the slides were incubated with streptavidin conjugated with peroxidase (Zymed P50242, 1:400, 30 min, at room temperature). All washes and dilutions were made with Tris-buffered-saline (TBS) (pH 7.4). The slides were developed with a chromogen solution containing 3-3 0 diaminobenzidine tetrachloride (Sigma Chemical Co. D5059) and H 2 O 2 in distilled water and counterstained in hematoxylin (Sigma GH5-2-16). Negative control slides were used by substituting the primary antibody by TBS. Evaluation of the leucocyte populations labeled with each antibody was made by two observers simultaneously and scored as increased, normal, mild decreased, moderately decreased and severely decreased. For immunohistochemical validation of the antibodies to the Iberian lynx tissues, healthy domestic cat tissues, with known reactivity for the antibodies employed, were used as positive controls. The grade of lymphoid depletion/tissue (normal, mild, moderate and severe) and the severity of lymphoid depletion/animal (LD) (none, mild, moderate and severe) on H&E slides are depicted in Tables 1 and 3 . The spleen was the lymphoid organ in which the cellular depletion (number of follicles and cellular density) was more evident and frequent (Table 3) . It was not possible to carry out the histological evaluation due to autolysis in two cases. One case did not show immune depletion with H&E and the rest of the animals studied presented some degree of lymphoid depletion (7 mild, 5 moderate and 2 severe). The grade of LD per animal did not depend on the origin of the animal, whether it was free or captive, or the cause of death, and it increased with age: mild LD was found mainly in young or young-adult animals while moderate and severe LD was more frequent in aged animals. LD was also severe in two Iberian lynxes suffering tuberculosis (Cases 16 and 17). Hyaline substance deposition was commonly observed in lymphoid follicles with evident lymphoid depletion (Fig. 1) . Besides traumatic lesions, the most interesting histopathological findings were pneumonia, epithelial neoplasms and tuberculosis (Table 1) . Five individuals (Cases 6, 11, 12, 16 and 17) presented neoplasia (squamous cell carcinoma of the skin and urinary bladder 'in situ' carcinoma) and/or tuberculosis (M. bovis, PCR). In one of the cases with tuberculosis (Case 11), the granulomas were only found in the lung (tuberculous primary complex); in another case with disseminated tuberculosis (Case 16) the main tuberculosis lesions were found in liver and lymph nodes, although small granulomas were also observed in the lung; another animal with a history of blindness (since 3 months of age) with generalized tuberculosis (Case 17), granulomas of tuberculosis were found in lung, liver, lymph nodes, both adrenal glands, and in both ocular globes (bilateral tuberculos granulomatous uveitis). In all granulomas acid-fast bacilli were histologically identified by the Ziehl-Neelsen technique and immunohistochemistry. Multinucleated cells (2-5 nuclei) were observed in the granulomas. No evidence of feline immunosuppressive virus infection (feline immunodeficiency virus, feline leukaemia virus, feline coronavirus and feline panleukopenia virus) was found in any of the individuals. CD3, CD79, MAC387 and CD68 immunohistochemistry is represented in Fig. 2 . CD3 immunostaining was seen labeling cells in T areas (periarteriolar lymphoid sheets and marginal zones in splenic white pulp and parafollicular areas in lymph nodes and MALT) (Fig. 3) ; CD79 positive cells were found in B areas (lymphoid follicles) ( Fig. 4a and b) . MAC387 stained large macrophages mainly located in splenic red pulp, medular lymph node and MALT (Fig. 4c) ; CD68 labeled scarce macrophages, dendritic cells and follicular dendritic cells (Fig. 4d) . The spleen was the organ with less immunostaining of the cellular subpopulations analyzed. Comparing the results among the leukocyte subpopulations studied (Fig. 2) , T cells (CD3-positive cells) were seriously decreased in most of the tissues analyzed, being the spleen the tissue with the most striking reduction; B cells were decreased in many cases in the spleen and lymph nodes but normal or increased in MALT; In many animals, coexisting reductions in both B (CD79) and T (CD3) cell subpopulations was observed in the spleen (13/15, 86.6%) and lymph nodes (12/15, 80.0%). Levels of macrophages and dendritic cells (positive cells to MAC387 and CD68, respectively) were normal in MALT samples; MAC387-positive cells were mildly reduced in some lymph nodes (5/15, 33.3% of the cases); splenic MAC387 and CD68 positive subpopulations were normal (MAC387 8/15, 53.3%; CD68 6/15, 46.6%) or increased (MAC387 7/15, 46.6%; CD68 8/15, 53.3%). Histologically, the 2-year-old Iberian lynx thymus sample was involutioned with abundant interlobular adipose tissue and low cellularity of lymphoid tissue, therefore, it was not included in the immunohistochemical study. The other two samples of thymus (from Iberian lynxes aged 16 and 17 months) were mildly involutioned with defined thymic lobules and medium cellularity. In these two cases, there were mild and severe reductions of CD3 positive subpopulations. This is a descriptive study in which reductions of immune cells were found by histopathology (H&E) and immunohistochemistry in peripheral lymphoid tissues of 15 Iberian lynxes. This is a very representative population considering that the total estimated population of this species left is of 200 animals. The leukocyte subpopulations detected by immunohistochemical methods was restricted to T lymphocytes, B lymphocytes and macrophages, since all the samples available for the study were formalin-fixed and paraffin embedded. Antibodies anti-human CD3, human MAC387, human CD79 and human CD68 (clone PG-M1, clone EBM11) have been tested in formalin-fixed tissues of domestic species, including the domestic cat [15] [16] [17] [18] . According to our results, the antibodies used also show cross-reaction with lynx tissues. To our knowledge, this is the first report of immune detection of leukocyte subpopulations in wild felids. In most animals, the lymphoid depletion observed with H&E had parallel decreases in CD3 and CD79 positive cells which indicate a partial combined immunodeficiency affecting T and B cells subpopulations. Spleen was the lymphoid organ with more evident hypocellularity and decreases of CD3 and CD79 populations (T and B lymphocytes). B cells were decreased in many cases in the spleen and lymph nodes but normal or increased in MALT. Minor reduction in T and B subpopulations, together with increases of macrophages (MAC387 and CD68 positive-cells) in lymph nodes and MALT samples could have been influenced by local pathologies (i.e. intestinal parasitic infestations in mesenteric lymph nodes and intestinal MALT). The increased number of macrophages and dendritic cells (MAC387 and CD68 positive cells) found in the splenic red pulp and lymph node medulla of tissues with T and B cell reductions indicates a proliferation of these cell types that remains unexplained although it could represent a compensating situation. T and B cell depletion and increase macrophage proliferation has been indicated in lymphoid tissues of domestic cats with experimental feline infectious peritonitis (Feline coronavirus) [15] . Follicular hyalinosis in the center of depleted follicles is a common histopathological finding in domestic cats with panleukopenia (feline parvovirus, FPV) [19] . In our opinion, the histopathology and immunohistochemistry of the three samples of thymus analyzed in this study are not representative. To evaluate properly the cellularity of the thymus, it is necessary to know the normal thymic involution in the lynx, and there are no studies on this species. In our cases, times and histological characteristics of thymic involution had to be compared with data published in the domestic cat [15] . Nevertheless, the two animals with similar ages (16 and 17 months) were both categorized as mild involution but one showed mild and the other severe T-cell reduction indicating that, at least in the latter case, it was a true depletion of T-lymphocytes and not a normal thymic involution. Iberian lynxes included in the study presented generalized immune depletion, which coexisted with high prevalence of neoplasms and tuberculosis (M. bovis). It is known that devastating diseases (late generalization of tuberculosis) and metastasic tumors can cause depression of the immune system [19] . In our opinion, the presentation of these neoplastic and infectious diseases were promoted by the defects in the immune system although the alternative hypothesis is equally valid. The coexistence in the same animal of pulmonary tuberculosis and squamous cells carcinoma of the skin and, in another case, the coexistence of two different epithelial carcinomas (skin and urinary transitional epithelium), could be coincidental, but also could be the result of a immunodeficiency status. To our knowledge this is the first report of any kind of tumor in the Iberian lynx. There are several publications describing tuberculosis in the Iberian lynx [9] [10] [11] . In two of our three cases, the primary pulmonary lesions indicate that the contamination was probably by inhalation from contaminated food as it has been indicated in a previous case of tuberculosis in the Iberian lynx and in other wild felids [10, 20] . In the remaining case, the distribution and size of the lesions do not confirm an inhalation route of contamination and suggest a digestive origin of the tuberculosis. Multinucleated cells (2-5 nuclei) observed in the granulomas did not display the typical aspect of Langhans' cells as in other species infected with M. bovis [19] . The presence of multinucleated cells in tuberculosis of Iberian lynx have not been previously indicated. It is interesting to note that one animal with disseminated tuberculosis (Case 17) presented granulomas in both adrenal glands and in both ocular globes. In the previous report about the pathology of one Iberian lynx with tuberculosis [10] , both adrenal glands were also affected. This fact could indicate a special predisposition of these animals to have adrenal tuberculosis, since adrenal glands are not a common site for tuberculosis lesions in other animal species [19] . Ocular tuberculosis is an uncommon but documented finding in the domestic cat [21] that has never been referred to in wild felids and could be also a consequence of an immune deficiency status. In our case, the early appearance of blindness (3-month-old) seems to indicate an ocular primoinfection rather than a dissemination, possibly due to contact with contaminated food. Nevertheless, the high prevalence of tuberculosis in our series of cases can be also influenced by the high prevalence of the disease in wild and domestic ungulates living in the same areas [11] . By far, the information available does not allow to establish the most likely cause of the immune depletion. All the animals were negative to feline immunosuppressive viruses (FeLV, FIV, FCoV, FPV) using conventional techniques for the domestic cat, which do not exclude the possibility of infection with lynx-specific viral strains or unknown viruses. In fact, the histopathological findings of the present study are coincident with those found in cats infected with immunosupppressive viruses, specially in non-acute diseases or carrier stages [19, 22] . Stress should also be taken into account as a possible origin of the immune depletion but only in the captive animals (nZ4). Finally, there are several reasons to consider a primary immune system defect due to the inbreeding of the Iberian lynx. Evidences for reduced genetic variability in the Iberian lynx, due to the low number of individuals separated in two small subpopulations, have been recently published [7] . The results of our study indicate that all animals presented some degree of immune depletion, affecting both B and T cells, which could only be explained in a few cases by old age and/or concomitant diseases (tuberculosis, tumors). Prospective investigations are necessary to assess the clinical immune system parameters (serum concentrations of IgA, IgG, IgM; in vitro lymphocyte blastogenesis with mitogens; flow cytometric quantification of blood subpopulations of leukocytes) in appropriate samples of living Iberian lynxes to know (a) if the histological cellular depletion found in this series of cases is present in the left population of Iberian lynxes; (b) if there are important clinical consequences and (c) the possible existence of a viral infection non-detected by conventional laboratorial techniques. The free status of the animals and therefore delicate management of this species makes it difficult to carry out such studies; in any case, sampling of living animals requires capture and anesthesia. Our preliminary results of an ongoing prospective study indicate the presence of leukopenia and lymphopenia in some of the animals. The reduction of the effectiveness of the immune system could increase the state of vulnerability in the critically endangered Iberian lynx to pathogens. According to our results, the Iberian lynx could be in serious risk of extinction not only due to known causes (habitat destruction, road accidents, traps.) but also to its immune vulnerability. Wild cats: status survey and conservation action plan Updated IUCN red list of threatened species Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) distribution and current conservation status in Spain Survival of injured Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) and non-natural mortality in centralsouthern Spain The Iberian lynx (Lynx pardina) in Spain: distribution and conservation problems Internal structure and patterns of contraction in the geographic range of the Iberian lynx Phylogenetic and phylogeographic analysis of Iberian lynx populations Patterns and causes of non-natural mortality in the Iberian lynx during a 40-year period of range contraction Bovine tuberculosis and the endangered Iberian lynx Tuberculosis in an Iberian lynx (Lynx pardina) Bovine tuberculosis (Mycobacterium bovis) in wildlife in Spain Gastrointestinal parasites of the Iberian lynx and other wild carnivores from central Spain Helminth fauna of the Iberian lynx, lynx pardinus Epidemiology of Ancylostoma spp. in the endangered Iberian lynx (Lynx pardinus) in the Donana National Park, south-west Spain A comparison of lymphatic tissues from cats with spontaneous feline infectious peritonitis (FIP), cats with FIP virus infection but no FIP, and cats with no infection Distribution of anti-CD68 (EBM11) immunoreactivity in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded bovine tissues Characterization of immunocompetent cells in the diseased canine periodontium Characterization of immune cell populations in oral mucosal tissue of healthy adult cats Pathology of domestic animals Tuberculosis in buffaloes (Syncerus caffer) in the Kruger National Park: Spread of the disease to other species Retinal detachment and bovine tuberculosis in cats The cat diseases and clinical management We thank Celia Sánchez, Margarita Galka and Pilar Fernández for submitting the samples and Doñana National Park authorities for making this work possible. We also thank our colleagues Astrid Vargas, Fernando Martínez and Javier Millán for the ongoing study. We are grateful to Pedro Aranda and Mario Hernando for their technical assistance. This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Enviroment, Research Project 90/2002.