Feline Blood Groups & their Implications for Breeders
by Judith Picknell
The problem of neonatal mortality.
For very many years cat breeders have suffered problems with unexplained
neonatal mortality of kittens, which seems to affect some breeds more than
others. At one time it was considered that these problems, dubbed ‘fading kitten
syndrome’ were probably caused mostly by latent FeLV or FIV infection, and many
of us spent sleepless nights as we awaited the results of yet another re-test
from the virology lab at Glasgow (no in-vitro tests done in minutes at the
surgery in those days!). Eventually, to our relief, most tests showed no
evidence of infection, but failed to explain why a healthy queen, with plenty of
milk, had lost most or all of an apparently healthy litter of kittens within a
few days off birth.
Sometimes mating to a different stud had a more successful outcome, and certain
matings were simply dismissed as ‘incompatible’ without any real understanding
of why they had failed to produce viable kittens. Often, however, good quality
queens were neutered, written off as ‘poor breeders’ or ‘poor mothers’, because
of their consistent inability to rear their kittens.
However work done by Professor Urs Giger and his team at the University of
Pennsylvania in the early 1990’s, revealed another reason for neonatal death:
incompatibility of blood group between the queen and her kittens.
Basics of Feline Blood Groups.
In humans there are several different series of factors involved in blood type,
including the ‘rhesus factor’. The most commonly known and understood series are
the primary Blood Group factors: A, B, and O. (To simplify a complex matter,
type ‘A’ individuals produce antibodies which react if they come into contact
with antigens in ‘alien’ type ‘B’ blood, and type ‘B’ individuals produce
similar antibodies against type ‘A’ blood. Individuals with the relatively
uncommon type ‘AB’ can cope with blood of either type, as their body
‘recognises’ both factors. Type ‘O’ individuals react against all other types of
blood, but their blood can safely be given to any other group, as it doesn’t
contain any antagonistic factors).
Neither type ‘A’ nor ‘B’ is dominant over the other (an individual who inherits
‘A’ from one parent and ‘B’ from the other will be type ‘AB’), but both are
dominant to ‘O’.
However, blood groups in cats work rather differently; no ‘O’ group exists. The
two main types are ‘A’ and ‘B’, with ‘A’ being a simple dominant over ‘B’; so a
cat may be type ‘B’ (homozygous recessive), type ’A’ but carrying ‘B’
(heterozygous), or ‘pure A’ (homozygous dominant).
There is a third type, ‘AB’, which is very uncommon, and until recently, poorly
understood. It is not the same as AB in humans (if a cat receives ‘A’ from one
parent and ‘B’ from the other, it will not be type ‘AB’, but type ‘A’ carrying
‘B’). Recent research suggests that type ‘AB’ operates as part of the same
series as types ‘A’ and ‘B’, although it appears to be inherited separately; it
is recessive to ‘A’ but dominant to ‘B’. Because it is so uncommon, for
practical purposes type ‘AB’ will be ignored for most of this article, as it is
not something, which most breeders are likely to encounter.
In cats, type ‘A’ individuals (the dominant type) produce no antibodies, or only
very weak ones, to type ‘B’ blood, and type AB cats produce no antibodies
against either of the other blood types. However type ‘B’ individuals produce
powerful antibodies to type ‘A’ blood, and this is where, in a breeding
situation, problems may arise.
Problems with incompatibility.
There are two main areas in which blood group incompatibility may have serious
consequences. The first lies in the situation where a cat receives a transfusion
of blood of a different type, giving rise to a serious incompatibility reaction,
usually with fatal consequences. The second, which is more likely to be a
problem and concern for most breeders, is in the breeding situation, where
incompatibility of blood type exists between a queen and her kittens.
The main problem in this situation is the neonatal mortality of type ‘A’ kittens
born to a type ‘B’ queen. As mentioned above, type ‘A’ cats produce only very
low levels of antibodies to type ‘B’ blood, but type ‘B’ cats produce powerful
anti-‘A’ antibodies; these antibodies are present in high concentrations in the
colostrum of a type ‘B’ queen. When newborn kittens suckle, and ingest the
colostrum, the antibodies pass across the lining of the gut into the kittens’
bloodstreams. If the kittens have type ‘A’ blood, the antibodies react to the
surface proteins of their red blood cells, and destroy them; this process is
called isoerythrolysis. This can cause acute anaemia, and usually produces
noticeable signs of jaundice as the kittens’ immature livers struggle to clear
them of the dead blood cells. The destruction of the oxygen-carrying red cells
and the resulting anaemia may cause necrotic damage to the kittens’ vital
internal organs, and/or necrosis of their extremities, such as the tips of ears
or tails. Typically, affected kittens will pass characteristically dark brown or
red-coloured urine, due to the excretion of the dead blood cells. In cases where
isoerethrolysis is a risk or is suspected, the kitten may be stimulated to
urinate onto a pad of white cotton wool or tissue to check for the
characteristic discolouration.
For reasons that are not fully understood, the severity of the disease is
variable, with some kittens being more badly affected than others; many are
severely affected and die, but a small number which should theoretically be at
risk appear to be unaffected. Symptoms may include jaundice and death within the
first two days of life; the kitten may survive but the tail tip may become
necrotic and fall off at 10 to 14 days of life; or in rare cases, no signs of
disease may be evident at all. It is also possible that where damage has
occurred to a kitten’s internal organs it may fail to thrive, and die at several
weeks of age.
Fortunately, the susceptibility of kittens to the effects of the maternal
antibodies only lasts for approximately the first 16-24 hours of life. After
this initial period the kitten’s gut lining becomes impermeable to them, so they
are unable to pass across it into the blood stream and cause damage. For this
reason it is safe for type ‘A’ kittens to be returned to feed from a type ‘B’
mother after this initial critical period has passed. (Some older papers on this
subject state that it is necessary to avoid type ‘A’ kittens feeding from a type
‘B’ queen for as much as the first 48 hours, but some more recent research
suggests that the critical period may be as little as 16 hours. Caution suggests
allowing at least 24 hours, on the basis of ‘better safe than sorry’).
There is anecdotal evidence (largely involving British Shorthairs, which have a
high proportion of blood type ‘B’) that some type ‘B’ queens may fail to
conceive when mated to a type ‘A’ stud, or may resorb their litters early in the
pregnancy. It also seems that some queens fail to carry their litters to full
term and spontaneously abort at around 6-8 weeks gestation. At present there has
been little scientific research to explain the mechanisms involved in this
pre-natal loss, but it appears possible that in some cases maternal antibodies
may be crossing the placenta and causing the intrauterine death of kittens of
incompatible blood type. However this is clearly not the general rule, and the
exact reasons for these occurrences remain uncertain at this point.
Practical implications.
In practice, when dealing with the potential of blood group incompatibility in a
mating, knowledge is the key to avoiding problems!
The most important thing is to know the blood group of the queen to be mated; if
she is blood type ‘A’ there should not be a risk of neonatal mortality through
isoerethrolysis, irrespective of the blood group of the stud, as she will not
produce any antibodies against the blood in type ’A’ kittens, and either
extremely low levels or none at all against that of type ‘B’ kittens. However,
when the queen is type ‘B’ the potential for problems exists.
When planning to breed from a type ‘B’ queen, the blood group of the stud is of
utmost significance. Mated to a group ‘B’ stud, only type ‘B’ kittens will be
produced, therefore there is no risk of incompatibility. However with a type ‘A’
stud, the potential of the queen giving birth to type ‘A’ kittens exists, and
all of these will be at risk of developing isoerethrolysis if allowed to suckle
from their dam in the first 24 hours of life. (See table 1).
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Table Showing
Outcomes of Mating Studs and Queens of Different Blood Types |
Stud |
|
‘Pure’ Type ‘A’ -
homozygous |
‘A’ carrying ‘B’
– heterozygous |
Type ‘B’ –
homozygous |
|
Queen |
‘Pure’ Type ‘A’
- homozygous
|
Only type ‘A’ kittens will be
produced –
none at risk.
100% ‘A’ (homozygous) |
Only type ‘A’
kittens will be produced. Some may be homozygous & some
heterozygous, but none at risk.
50% ‘A’ (homozygous)
50% ‘A’ (heterozygous) |
Only heterozygous type ‘A’ kittens
(i.e. ‘A’ carrying ‘B’) will be produced –
none at risk.
100% ‘A’ (heterozygous) |
|
Type ‘A’
carrying ‘B’
- heterozygous |
Only type ‘A’ kittens will be produced. Some may
be homozygous & some heterozygous, but none at risk.
50% ‘A’ (homozygous)
50% ‘A’ (heterozygous) |
Some kittens may be type ‘B’, and others type
‘A’, but none at risk.
25% ‘A’ (homozygous)
50% ‘A’ (heterozygous)
25% ‘B’ |
Some kittens may be type ‘B’, and others type
‘A’, but
none at risk.
50% ‘A’ (heterozygous)
50% ‘B’ |
|
Type ‘B’ –
homozygous
|
Only heterozygous type ‘A’ kittens will be
produced.
ALL these kittens
will be AT RISK.
100% ‘A’ (heterozygous) |
Some kittens may be type ‘B’, and others type
‘A’.
All type ‘A’
kittens will be AT RISK.
50% ‘A’ (heterozygous)
50% ‘B’ |
Only type ‘B’ kittens will be
produced –
none at risk.
|
The most straightforward option may seem to be only ever to use type ’B’
studs when breeding from a type ‘B’ queen. This may be feasible in breeds such
as British Shorthair, where there is a fairly large genepool and a substantial
majority of the population (59% in UK) is type ‘B’, but even there breeders may
be denying themselves the positive benefits of using a type ‘A’ stud which is
most suitable in other respects, either because of superior conformation or
because of his pedigree.
In breeds such as the Devon Rex, where cats with type ‘B’ blood comprise a
substantial minority of the breed and the genepool is already limited, further
problems exist, which will be discussed later.
Some stud owners may, for whatever reason, decide not to blood-type their boy,
possibly because they have never had neonatal mortality problems themselves, or
are working entirely with type ‘A’ queens, and therefore do not perceive
blood-group incompatibility as a problem.
Suffice to say, for now, that there will be occasions where it will be desirable
to mate a ‘B’ queen to an ‘A’ stud, or to a stud whose blood type is unknown. In
these circumstances it is still possible to avoid isoerythrolysis and subsequent
kitten mortality, providing that care is taken.
The most important thing to remember is that newborn type ‘A’ kittens will only
be at risk if they ingest ‘anti-A’ antibodies from their mother’s colostrum
during the first 16-24 hours after birth. After that time the antibodies cannot
cross the gut wall into the blood stream to destroy the kittens’ red blood
cells. The really difficult thing is to make sure that you are there (and
awake!) when the queen gives birth, so that you can remove the kittens from her
before they have the opportunity to suckle. Assuming that you manage this
without mishap there are several possible courses of action to tide you all over
the critical 24-hour period.
First, and possibly most simple, is to hand feed all the babies with Cimicat or
a similar feline milk replacement for the initial period, returning them to mum
once they have ceased to be at risk. The disadvantage of this option is that a
mother who has all her kittens taken away may become very distressed, but it is
obviously preferable to losing some or all of the kittens. However some breeders
successfully manage this situation by fitting the queen with a long section of
stocking or lightweight tubular elastic bandage, to cover the whole length of
the body from shoulders to haunches, ensuring that all the nipples are well
covered to prevent the kittens from suckling (see picture, right). This allows
the kittens to be returned to the queen between feeds to be kept warm, washed
and mothered, allowing bonding and benefiting both queen and kittens.

Sexyrexy Babbetjie, owned by Laraine Lister of Rexitude Devon Rex, wearing a
home-made 'leotard', made from part of a pair of thick tights, to prevent her
newborn kittens from suckling.
Secondly it is now possible to order and obtain blood-typing kits through
veterinary surgeries, with which it is possible to type the individual kittens
at birth using blood from the umbilical cord. However breeders who have used
these kits report that they can be fiddly to use, and that it is not always easy
to obtain enough blood from the cord to perform an accurate test. The advantage
of this approach is that once the kittens have been tested, any type ’B’
kittens, which are not at risk, can be returned to the queen for her to feed and
care for in the normal way, which should prevent her from fretting, and the type
‘A’ kittens can be handfed and returned to her when it is safe to do so. There
is always the chance that ALL the kittens will be type ‘A’ and that they will
all therefore need to be handfed in any case; but if all test as type ‘B’ then
the problem is over!
Possibly the optimum solution, if you are in a position to arrange it, is to
plan for a type ‘A’ queen to kitten a week or so before the type ‘B’ queen is
due to give birth, and then to cross-foster the kittens for at least the first
24 hours. The older kittens will be unaffected by the type ‘B’ queen’s anti-A
antibodies, and the newborns will be safe to suckle from a type ‘A’ queen.
Obviously it is of paramount importance to know the blood type of queens in
those breeds where both blood groups are known to occur with any frequency. Even
in those breeds where type ‘B’ is known to occur only very rarely it may be
useful to type queens when either their pedigree or a previous history of
neonatal or pre-natal loss suggests that there might be a problem. It should
also be considered before outcrossing a queen from a breed where type ‘B’ is
known to occur in the population (eg Cornish Rex), to a stud from a breed known
to be predominantly or exclusively type ‘A’ (eg Siamese/Oriental or Russian
Blue). However it is not critical to know the blood group of the queen if the
stud to which she is mated has already been confirmed as type ‘B’, as no
incompatibility problems arise where the male is of this type.
Ideally all cats used for breeding, which belong to those breeds where both
blood groups are known to occur, should be blood-typed, but this will not always
be practicable, or seen as necessary by all breeders.
The blood typing of newborns, in situations where a type ‘B’ queen is likely to
produce a mix of type ‘A’ and type ‘B’ kittens, can be a useful tool in avoiding
neonatal mortality due to isoerethrolysis; however it will not necessary or
practical to do this for kittens from all matings, the majority of which are not
at risk.
In the rare instances of cats with blood type ‘AB’, they should for practical
purposes be treated as though they were type ‘A’. A type ‘B’ queen mated to a
type ‘AB’ stud should be treated as if she had been mated to a type ‘A’ stud,
and any type ‘AB’ kittens from a type ‘B’ queen should similarly be treated as
if they were type ‘A’ kittens, and should not be allowed to feed from their
mother for the first 24 hours, to avoid the risk of isoerethrolysis. However a
type ‘AB’ queen in theory should be safe to mate to studs of any blood type, as
she will not produce antibodies against the blood of kittens of her own or
either of the other types.
Distribution of blood groups.
The blood group that constitutes the greatest proportion of cats over all breeds
and in non-pedigrees is the dominant type ‘A’.
The proportion of cats with type ‘B’ blood varies significantly between breeds,
with the greatest numbers occurring among British Shorthairs, Persian-type
longhairs, Exotics, and Devon and Cornish Rex.
The overall proportion of cats displaying type ‘AB’ is very tiny, and the Bengal
breed seems to be disproportionately heavily represented within this group. This
may be reflect the use of hybrids, produced by crosses with the Asian Leopard
Cat, in the foundation stock of this breed, as the genetic makeup in terms of
blood groups is significantly different in some wild species to that of domestic
cats.
The most extensive study to date of feline blood-type distribution across
different breeds has been carried out by Professor Giger and his team at the
University of Pennsylvania, which shows 33% of Cornish and 45% of Devons are
type ‘B’.
Limited testing done in the UK, in a study based at the Royal Edinburgh
Veterinary School, shows a somewhat different picture to the overall results in
the international study; however as no Cornish and only 2 Devons were included
in this study it does not provide useful statistics on blood types in these
breeds in the UK. Results of tests recorded by the joint Rex BAC suggest that
distribution of blood types in Devons broadly mirrors the international picture.
On the basis of anecdotal evidence, the vast majority of Cornish in the UK now
seem to be blood type ‘A’, although the BAC now accepts that the presence of
type ‘B’ within the UK breeding pool, and suggests that all breeding cats should
be bloodtyped.
Overall, differences between the American and UK studies emerged, especially in
respect of the unexpectedly high proportion of type ‘AB’ cats in the UK study.
This particular difference may reflect the proportion of Bengals typed in this
study, but may also be influenced by the fact that a new testing method was also
under trial.
The explanation for the differences between the UK figures and the wider
international picture may in fact lie, at least in part, in the relatively
isolated position of the UK in respect of the import of cats from abroad. Its
geographic status as an island means that the native non-pedigree cat population
may have developed largely separate from that even in neighbouring parts of
mainland Europe; a slightly higher proportion of group ‘B’ blood in the original
population may have been exaggerated and consolidated by ongoing interbreeding
within this (relatively) restricted gene pool. During the 20th century the
imposition of quarantine regulations, introduced in order to protect the UK’s
rabies-free status, will undoubtedly have increased the isolation in the
indigenous non-pedigree population caused by basic geographical factors.
This has been of even greater importance in respect of the pedigree cat fancy.
It has always been possible to export cats, and indeed both Cornish and Devon
Rex breeds have spread around the world from their origins in South West
England. However, importing cats has been severely restricted by both the
bureaucratic complexity and the sheer financial expense of putting an animal
through six months quarantine in addition to purchase and shipping costs.
Until very recently, therefore, the feline gene pool in the UK has had fairly
low levels of input from abroad, compared with those countries in which the
cross-border movement of animals has been unrestricted, either for sale or for
stud service. However, the introduction of the Pet Travel Scheme (‘Pet
Passports’) may in time have a significant impact upon the gene pool of pedigree
cats in the UK. Not only does it make the import of breeding animals either from
or via other EU countries much easier and less expensive, but also opens up the
possibility in the future of taking queens to stud in mainland Western Europe.
Differences in breeding and showing policies under the GCCF as compared with
FIFe, CFA and other international cat fancy organisations may also account for
some differences in the gene pools of specific breeds in the UK, compared to
their equivalents elsewhere in the world. These policies, especially in respect
of permitting outcrosses, have in many cases been influenced by the difficulty
of importing cats and by the consequent restriction of the numbers of breeding
stock available within certain individual breeds.
It is not unreasonable to suppose that overall differences in the gene pool are
reflected by the differences in the prevalence of blood groups. When introducing
overseas bloodlines to their breeding programs, UK breeders need to be aware
where differences in blood group distribution profiles exist, and where
appropriate to type and to take appropriate action to avoid running into
incompatibility problems, either in the F1 or subsequent generations.
It is interesting that Australia, which is also a rabies-free country and
operates a quarantine system for domestic cats, also shows significant
differences from the norm in this respect, with a much higher percentage of type
‘B’ cats than that in the overall international figures. It may be significant
that Australia has no indigenous felines, and that the majority of the cats that
formed the foundation of the species in this continent probably originated from
the UK.
Noticeable variations in blood-type distribution of non-pedigree domestic cats
also occurs regionally within the USA, with blood type ‘B’ occurring at less
than 1% in the North East and Midwestern states, and at up to 6% on the West
coast. No theories are available at present to account for these differences.
Seeking to eliminate an ‘unwanted’ gene.
In theory, eliminating a dominant gene is straightforward, and simply requires
that all cats of the dominant phenotype (in this case blood type ‘A’) should be
neutered. This is only likely to be considered in British Shorthairs, as this is
the only breed in which group ‘B’ is the majority blood group.
In practice, this is less easy to carry out. If a particularly good specimen of
a breed is type ‘A’, the owner is likely to be reluctant to neuter the cat and
to lose the positive benefits that it could give to their bloodlines, and,
indeed, to the breed as a whole. People with good type ‘A’ queens will not
suffer problems with neonatal erethrolysis in kittens, and are unlikely to see
any benefit in having them spayed.
A possible working compromise under these circumstances would be to neuter all
type ‘A’ males, using only type ‘B’ studs within the breed, so that problems
with neonatal mortality are avoided irrespective of the blood group of the queen
to which they are mated. This in turn is likely in the longer term to further
reduce the incidence of blood group ‘A’ within the breed.
To eliminate a recessive gene from breeding stock is a far more difficult
proposition than eliminating a dominant. Even if the recessive phenotype (blood
type ‘B’) occurs at fairly low frequency and all cats of that blood type are
neutered, there is likely to remain a surprisingly high number of cats that are
type ‘A’ but carrying the recessive gene for type ‘B’. For example, in a breed
with only 10% type ‘B’ individuals, over 43% could be heterozygous ‘A’ (carrying
‘B’). (See Table 2).
The GCCF Cat Welfare Trust is currently supporting a project proposed by Dr
Matthew Binns of the Animal Health Trust, to produce a feline genome map. When
this project is complete it will be possible to genetically screen cats to check
their carrier status for a whole range of recessive genetic diseases, as has
already been done for the recessive hereditary disease gangliosidosis in the
Korat breed. It has recently become possible to test whether cats with type 'A'
blood carry the recessive genes for type 'B' or 'AB' blood types, although at
present this test is only being carried out by a limited number of laboratories.
Where a test to detect carrier status is not available, the only available
method of identification is test mating. This involves mating the cat to be
tested either to cats of the recessive genotype, or to proven carriers of the
gene. If a type ‘A’ cat produces a total of 11 kittens, none of which are type
‘B’, when mated to type ‘B’ cats, or 19 kittens (again all type ‘A’) when mated
to a proven type ‘B’ carrier, there is only a 0.1% probability (ie one chance in
a thousand) that the tested cat is a carrier of the recessive type ‘B’. However
a single type ‘B’ kitten is sufficient to prove that the cat is a carrier!
Clearly a large number of kittens would need to be produced, all of which would
be either possible or known carriers of the ‘unwanted’ recessive gene, and all
of which would have to be blood-typed. Because of the numbers of kittens
involved, test-mating queens is certainly unlikely to be feasible, and even
test-mating studs could prove extremely expensive. Also it should be remembered
that this only gives a probability that the tested cat is not a carrier – there
are always the ones that defy the statistics, and even with testing to this high
level of probability there is always a tiny chance of the recessive gene
‘slipping through the net’. It has been said that recessives, like diamonds, are
forever! Realistically, it is doubtful whether it is worthwhile to go to these
lengths in respect of a non-lethal gene.
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