| Literature DB >> 28102802 |
Zhanlong He, Bo Liu, Yufen Tao, Chao Li, Ming Xia, Weiming Zhong, Xi Jiang, Hongqi Liu, Ming Tan.
Abstract
Noroviruses are a leading viral cause of acute gastroenteritis among humans. During the 2014-15 epidemic season, norovirus GII.17 was detected in rhesus monkeys in China. Genetic, structural, and challenge studies revealed virus mutations and verified the infections. Thus, cross-species transmission may occur, and monkeys may be a virus reservoir.Entities:
Keywords: China; Norovirus; cross-species transmission; enteric infections; histo-blood group antigens; monkey; natural infection; viruses
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28102802 PMCID: PMC5324814 DOI: 10.3201/eid2302.161077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Phylogenetic analysis based on the viral capsid protein 1 genes of the monkey GII.17 norovirus and other reference human GII.17 noroviruses. The analysis involved 20 full-length viral capsid protein 1–encoding genes (gene identification shown), including 17 previously reported GII.17 human norovirus representatives. Black square indicates noroviruses reported in (9); black triangle indicates human GII.17 variants circulating in China as reported in (2); black circle indicates the monkey GII.17 norovirus from this study. Comparison viruses are 1 from GII.13 genotype and 1 from GII.21 genotype. The evolutionary history was inferred by using the neighbor-joining method. The optimal tree with the branch length sum of 0.91354301 is shown. The percentage of replicate trees in which the associated taxa clustered together in the bootstrap test (1,000 replicates) are shown above the branches. The tree is drawn to scale; branch lengths are in the same units as those of the evolutionary distances used to infer the phylogenetic tree. The evolutionary distances were computed by using the Tajima-Nei method and represent the number of base substitutions per site. The analysis involved 20 nt sequences. All positions containing gaps and missing data were eliminated. The final dataset contained a total of 1,265 positions. Evolutionary analyses were conducted in MEGA6 (http://www.megasoftware.net).
Figure 2Challenge testing of 2 norovirus-negative macaques with GII.17 norovirus. A, B) Challenged macaques shed norovirus-specific RNA (genome copies) for at least 16 days; shedding peaked on postinoculation day 3. C, D) Serum norovirus antibody titers before (postinoculation day 1) and after (postinoculation day 7–35) challenge.