Literature DB >> 11981731

The role of serum antibodies in the protection against rotavirus disease: an overview.

Baoming Jiang1, Jon R Gentsch, Roger I Glass.   

Abstract

A critical observation in understanding immunity to rotavirus is that children infected with wild virus or vaccinated with oral live vaccines develop a humoral immune response and are protected against severe disease upon reinfection. Nevertheless, much controversy exists as to whether these serum antibodies are directly involved in protection or merely reflect recent infection, leaving the protective role to mucosal or cell-mediated immunity or to other as-yet-undefined mechanisms. We have reviewed data from a variety of studies in humans, including challenge experiments in adult volunteers, longitudinal studies of rotavirus infection in young children, and clinical trials of animal and animal-human reassortant rotavirus vaccines in infants. These data suggest that serum antibodies, if present at critical levels, are either protective themselves or are an important and powerful correlate of protection against rotavirus disease, even though other host effectors may play an important role as well.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11981731     DOI: 10.1086/340103

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Infect Dis        ISSN: 1058-4838            Impact factor:   9.079


  54 in total

Review 1.  Correlates of protection induced by vaccination.

Authors:  Stanley A Plotkin
Journal:  Clin Vaccine Immunol       Date:  2010-05-12

2.  Predominance of rotavirus genotype G9 during the 1999, 2000, and 2002 seasons among hospitalized children in the city of Salvador, Bahia, Brazil: implications for future vaccine strategies.

Authors:  Norma Santos; Eduardo M Volotão; Caroline C Soares; Gúbio S Campos; Silvia Ines Sardi; Yasutaka Hoshino
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 5.948

3.  Differential requirements for T cells in viruslike particle- and rotavirus-induced protective immunity.

Authors:  Sarah E Blutt; Kelly L Warfield; Mary K Estes; Margaret E Conner
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2008-01-09       Impact factor: 5.103

4.  Development and validation of DNA microarray for genotyping group A rotavirus VP4 (P[4], P[6], P[8], P[9], and P[14]) and VP7 (G1 to G6, G8 to G10, and G12) genes.

Authors:  Shinjiro Honma; Vladimir Chizhikov; Norma Santos; Masatoshi Tatsumi; Maria do Carmo S T Timenetsky; Alexandre C Linhares; Joana D'Arc P Mascarenhas; Hiroshi Ushijima; George E Armah; Jon R Gentsch; Yasutaka Hoshino
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2007-06-13       Impact factor: 5.948

5.  Reinfection of adult cattle with rotavirus B during repeated outbreaks of epidemic diarrhea.

Authors:  Michiko Hayashi; Toshiaki Murakami; Yoshizumi Kuroda; Hikaru Takai; Hisahiro Ide; Ainani Awang; Tohru Suzuki; Ayako Miyazaki; Makoto Nagai; Hiroshi Tsunemitsu
Journal:  Can J Vet Res       Date:  2016-07       Impact factor: 1.310

6.  Virus-specific intestinal IFN-gamma producing T cell responses induced by human rotavirus infection and vaccines are correlated with protection against rotavirus diarrhea in gnotobiotic pigs.

Authors:  Lijuan Yuan; Ke Wen; Marli S P Azevedo; Ana M Gonzalez; Wei Zhang; Linda J Saif
Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2008-04-18       Impact factor: 3.641

7.  Unexpected substitution of dominant rotavirus G genotypes in French hospitalized children over five consecutive seasons.

Authors:  A de Rougemont; J Kaplon; P Lebon; F Huet; F Denis; S Alain; L Fourcade; J Grosjean; M-J El-Hajje; D Gendrel; P Pothier
Journal:  Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis       Date:  2008-10-15       Impact factor: 3.267

8.  Demographic variability, vaccination, and the spatiotemporal dynamics of rotavirus epidemics.

Authors:  Virginia E Pitzer; Cécile Viboud; Lone Simonsen; Claudia Steiner; Catherine A Panozzo; Wladimir J Alonso; Mark A Miller; Roger I Glass; John W Glasser; Umesh D Parashar; Bryan T Grenfell
Journal:  Science       Date:  2009-07-17       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 9.  Rotavirus vaccines: an overview.

Authors:  Penelope H Dennehy
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  2008-01       Impact factor: 26.132

10.  Vaccine-induced antibody isotypes are skewed by impaired CD4 T cell and invariant NKT cell effector responses in MyD88-deficient mice.

Authors:  Onyinye I Iweala; Donald W Smith; Kabir S Matharu; Isabel Sada-Ovalle; Deanna D Nguyen; Rosemarie H Dekruyff; Dale T Umetsu; Samuel M Behar; Cathryn R Nagler
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2009-07-20       Impact factor: 5.422

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