| Literature DB >> 30845670 |
Johan Nordgren1, Lennart Svensson2,3.
Abstract
Noroviruses are the most common etiological agent of acute gastroenteritis worldwide. Despite their high infectivity, a subpopulation of individuals is resistant to infection and disease. This susceptibility is norovirus genotype-dependent and is largely mediated by the presence or absence of human histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs) on gut epithelial surfaces. The synthesis of these HBGAs is mediated by fucosyl- and glycosyltransferases under the genetic control of the FUT2 (secretor), FUT3 (Lewis) and ABO(H) genes. The so-called non-secretors, having an inactivated FUT2 enzyme, do not express blood group antigens and are resistant to several norovirus genotypes, including the predominant GII.4. Significant genotypic and phenotypic diversity of HBGA expression exists between different human populations. Here, we review previous in vivo studies on genetic susceptibility to norovirus infection. These are discussed in relation to population susceptibility, vaccines, norovirus epidemiology and the impact on public health.Entities:
Keywords: histo-blood group antigens; norovirus; secretor status; susceptibility
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30845670 PMCID: PMC6466115 DOI: 10.3390/v11030226
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Biosynthesis pathway of histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs) by stepwise addition of monosaccharides to precursor structures. The FUT2 (secretor) gene encodes an α1,2-fucosyltransferase which adds a fucose residue in α1,2 linkage to the terminal galactose of the H type 1 precursor. Non-secretors, having a non-functional FUT2 enzyme, cannot synthesize the H type 1 antigen from its precursor and lack α1,2-linked fucose HBGAs in the intestinal mucosa and other secretions. The synthesis of the A and B antigens by the corresponding enzymes requires the presence of the H type 1 antigen, adding an N-acetylgalactosamine (A) or a galactose (B) in a α1,4 linkage on the galactose residue of the H type 1 antigen. The Lewis antigens are synthesized with the FUT3 enzyme which adds a α1,4-linked fucose residue on the N-acetylglucosamine of the H antigen or the H antigen precursor, generating Lewis a or Lewis b antigens respectively. Abbreviations: Gal: galactose; GlcNAc: N-acetylglucosamine; Fuc: fucose.
FUT2 polymorphisms with known effect on secretor status in different populations. Adapted from [31]. The two most common and investigated in genetic susceptibility studies are highlighted in bold.
| Allele | Mutation Type | Phenotype | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| Se302 | Missense | Non-secretor a | Thai, Bangladeshi |
|
| Missense | Weak-secretor | East Asian |
|
| Nonsense | Non-secretor | Caucasian, African, Meso-American, Central Asian |
| Se571 | Nonsense | Non-secretor | Filipino and Samoan |
| Se628 | Nonsense | Non-secretor | Japanese and Chinese |
| Se658 | Nonsense | Non-secretor | Chinese |
| Se357,480,778 | Frameshift | Non-secretor | African |
| Se849 | Nonsense | Non-secretor | Chinese and Filipino |
| Sedel1 | Deletion | Non-secretor | Indian and Bangladeshi |
| Sedel2 | Deletion | Non-secretor | Samoan |
| Sefus | Fusion | Weak-secretor | Japanese |
a No α1,2-fucosyltransferase activity found in transfected COS7 cells [32].
Distribution of ABO and secretor status in studies with GI and non-GII.4 genotype infections (symptomatic and/or asymptomatic). Only included are studies and/or genotypes with at least five representative samples.
| Genotype | Country | O | A | B | AB | Secretor | Non-Secretor | Type of Study | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||||
| GI.1 | USA | 21/28 (75%) | 10/19 (53%) | 3/7 (43%) | 0/1 (0%) | 34/55 (62%) | 0/22 (0%) | Challenge | [ | |
| GI.1 a | USA | 25/26 (96%) | 14/18 (78%) | 3/5 (60%) | 0/2 (0%) | 42/43 (98%) | 0/8 (0%) | Challenge | [ | |
| GI.3 | Sweden | 10/23 (43%) | 14/32 (44%) | 2/12 (17%) | 0/1 (0%) | 26/68 (38%) | 7/15 (47%) | Outbreak | [ | |
| GI.3 | Netherlands | 11/11 (100%) | 9/9 (100%) | 0/2 (0%) | 0/0 (0%) | 20/22 (91%) | 4/7 (57%) | Outbreak | [ | |
|
| ||||||||||
| GII.1 | USA | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + c | + | Active surveillance | [ | |
| GII.1 | Ecuador | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + | + | Birth cohort | [ | |
| GII.2 a | USA | 4/8 (50%) | 2/4 (50%) | 1/1 (100%) | 2/2 (100%) | 8/12 (67%) | 1/3 (33%) | Challenge | [ | |
| GII.3 b | China | 3/6 (50%) | 5/8 (63%) | 1/2 (50%) | 0/0 (0%) | 9/14 (64%) | 0/2 (0%) | Outbreak | [ | |
| GII.3 b | China | 8/22 (36%) | 4/6 (67%) | 4/8 (50%) | 3/3 (100%) | 18/38 (47%) | 1/1 (100%) | Outbreak | [ | |
| GII.3 b | China | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | 15/102 (15%) | 1/22 (5%) | Active surveillance | [ | |
| GII.3 | Tunisia | + | + | + | + | 23/76 (30%) | 5/22 (23%) | Passive surveillance | [ | |
| GII.3 d | Vietnam | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | 23/229 (10%) | 5/31 (16%) | Surveillance | [ | |
| GII.6 | USA | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + | +/− | Active surveillance | [ | |
| GII.7 | USA | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + | + | Active surveillance | [ | |
| GII.10 | Burkina Faso | 4/71 (6%) | 1/34 (3%) | 0/55 (0%) | 0/4 (0%) | 5/164 (3%) | 0/44 (0%) | Passive surveillance | [ | |
| GII.17 | China | 23/69 (33%) | 23/46 (50%) | 18/47 (38%) | 3/7 (43%) | 67/169 (40%) | 2/23 (9%) | Outbreak | [ | |
| GII.23 | Ecuador | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + | − | Birth cohort | [ | |
a Blood groups determined for both secretors and non-secretors; b Study in populations where the weak secretor genotype is common; c When real numbers are not publicly available; indicated by susceptible (+) resistant (−) reduced susceptibility (+/−); d Secretor and/or partial secretor.
Distribution of ABO and secretor status in studies with GII.4 genotype infections (symptomatic and asymptomatic). Only included are studies and/or genotypes with at least five representative samples.
| GII.4 Variant | Country | O | A | B | AB | Secretor | Non-Secretor | Type of Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Orleans 2009 | USA | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + a | − | Active surveillance | [ |
| Den Haag 2006b | USA | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + | − | Active surveillance | [ |
| Sydney 2012 | USA | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + | − | Active surveillance | [ |
| Den Haag 2006b | USA | + | + | + | + | 15/25 (60%) | 1/2 (50%) | Outbreaks | [ |
| New Orleans 2009 | USA | + | + | + | + | 39/49 (80%) | 2/3 (66%) | Outbreaks | [ |
| Sydney 2012 | USA | + | + | + | + | 5/9 (55%) | 0/2 (0%) | Outbreaks | [ |
| New Orleans 2009 b | Ecuador | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + | − | Birth cohort | [ |
| Den Haag 2006b b | Ecuador | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | + | − | Birth cohort | [ |
| Farmington Hills 2002 | USA | NA | NA | NA | NA | 16/23 (70%) | 1/17 (6%) | Challenge | [ |
| Den Haag 2006b | China | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | 17/102 (17%) | 1/22 (5%) | Active surveillance | [ |
| Hunter 2004 | Spain | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | 33/43 (77%) | 1/17 (6%) | Outbreak | [ |
| N.A | Denmark | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | 29/52 (56%) | 0/9 (0%) | Outbreak | [ |
| N.A | Sweden | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | 53/97 (55%) | 0/18 (0%) | Outbreaks | [ |
| N.A | China | 7/50 (14%) | 25/52 (48%) | 9/28 (32%) | 3/5 (60%) | 41/115 (36%) | 0/15 (0%) | Outbreak | [ |
| Den Haag 2006b c | China | 24/35 (69%) | 20/28 (71%) | 7/9 (78%) | 2/2 (100%) | 49/69 (71%) | 4/5 (80%) | Outbreak | [ |
| Mixed d,e | Vietnam | N.A | N.A | N.A | N.A | 22/229 (10%) | 0/31 (0%) | Surveillance | [ |
| Mixed | Burkina Faso | 1/71 (1%) | 0/34 (0%) | 7/55 (13%) | 1/4 (25%) | 9/164 (5%) | 1/44 (2%) | Passive surveillance | [ |
| Mixed | Nicaragua | + | + | + | − f | + | − f | Passive surveillance | [ |
| Unknown c | Israel | 16/30 (53%) | 17/34 (50%) | 7/16 (44%) | 6/11 (55%) | N.A | N.A | Outbreak | [ |
| Unknown c | Israel | 36/66 (55%) | 28/77 (36%) | 21/45 (47%) | 7/25 (28%) | N.A | N.A | Outbreak | [ |
a When real numbers are not publicly available; indicated by susceptible (+) resistant (−) reduced susceptibility (+/−); b The study also included Sydney (n = 4) and Osaka (n = 1) GII.4 variants; c Blood groups determined in both secretor and non-secretors; d Secretor and/or partial secretor included in secretor group; e Including Den Haag 2006b, New Orleans 2009 and Sydney 2012 variants; f Prevalence of AB and non-secretor is low in Nicaragua.
Figure 2A simplistic overview of secretor status in different population groups. Secretors (green) are susceptible to secretor-dependent norovirus genotypes, including the globally predominant GII.4 genotype. Secretors are also further susceptible to secretor-independent genotypes. Non-secretors (red) are only susceptible to secretor-independent genotypes. As of yet, no genotypes have been observed to exclusively infect non-secretors. Weak-secretors (mix red or green) are common in East Asian populations, having a reduced expression of secretor antigens, and would thus be partially susceptible to secretor-specific genotypes. The prevalence of secretors is particularly high in Meso-American populations, which may lead to a higher disease burden in the population due to (1) higher rates of GII.4 infection and (2) a larger portion of the population being susceptible to both secretor and secretor-independent genotypes.