| Literature DB >> 28637803 |
David D Fischer1, Sukumar Kandasamy1, Francine C Paim1, Stephanie N Langel1, Moyasar A Alhamo1, Lulu Shao1, Juliet Chepngeno1, Ayako Miyazaki1, Huang-Chi Huang1, Anand Kumar1, Gireesh Rajashekara1, Linda J Saif1, Anastasia N Vlasova2.
Abstract
Malnutrition leads to increased morbidity and is evident in almost half of all deaths in children under the age of 5 years. Mortality due to rotavirus diarrhea is common in developing countries where malnutrition is prevalent; however, the relationship between malnutrition and rotavirus infection remains unclear. In this study, gnotobiotic pigs transplanted with the fecal microbiota of a healthy 2-month-old infant were fed protein-sufficient or -deficient diets and infected with virulent human rotavirus (HRV). After human rotavirus infection, protein-deficient pigs had decreased human rotavirus antibody titers and total IgA concentrations, systemic T helper (CD3+ CD4+) and cytotoxic T (CD3+ CD8+) lymphocyte frequencies, and serum tryptophan and angiotensin I-converting enzyme 2. Additionally, deficient-diet pigs had impaired tryptophan catabolism postinfection compared with sufficient-diet pigs. Tryptophan supplementation was tested as an intervention in additional groups of fecal microbiota-transplanted, rotavirus-infected, sufficient- and deficient-diet pigs. Tryptophan supplementation increased the frequencies of regulatory (CD4+ or CD8+ CD25+ FoxP3+) T cells in pigs on both the sufficient and the deficient diets. These results suggest that a protein-deficient diet impairs activation of the adaptive immune response following HRV infection and alters tryptophan homeostasis.Entities:
Keywords: ACE2; fecal microbiota; gnotobiotic; malnutrition; rotavirus; tryptophan
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28637803 PMCID: PMC5583476 DOI: 10.1128/CVI.00172-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Vaccine Immunol ISSN: 1556-679X