| Literature DB >> 33968359 |
Umer Seid Geletu1, Munera Ahmednur Usmael2, Fufa Dawo Bari3.
Abstract
Rotavirus is a major pathogen responsible for diarrheal disease in calves, resulting in loss of productivity and economy of farmers. However, various facets of diarrheal disease caused by rotavirus in calves in the world are inadequately understood, considering that diarrheal disease caused by rotavirus is a vital health problem in calves that interrupts production benefits with reduced weight gain and increased mortality, and its potential for zoonotic spread. The pathological changes made by rotavirus are almost exclusively limited to the small intestine that leads to diarrhea. It is environmentally distributed worldwide and was extensively studied. Reassortment is one of the important mechanisms for generating genetic diversity of rotaviruses and eventually for viral evolution. So, the primary strategy is to reduce the burden of rotavirus infections by practicing early colostrum's feeding in newborn calves, using vaccine, and improving livestock management. Rotaviruses have a wide host range, infecting many animal species as well as humans. As it was found that certain animal rotavirus strains had antigenic similarities to some human strains, this may be an indication for an animal to play a role as a source of rotavirus infection in humans. Groups A to C have been shown to infect both humans and animals. The most commonly detected strains in both human and animals are G2, G3, G4, and G9, P [6]. Therefore, this review was made to get overview epidemiology status and zoonotic importance of bovine rotavirus.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33968359 PMCID: PMC8081619 DOI: 10.1155/2021/6639701
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Med Int ISSN: 2042-0048
Figure 1Diagrammatic representation of the rotavirus particle and its genome coding. (I) The migration pattern of 11 dsRNA genome segments of rotavirus on a polyacrylamide gel. (II) Virus proteins encoded by specific genome segments in Section 1. The proteins were blotted onto a cellulose membrane and detected with rotavirus-specific antibodies. (III) Schematic diagram of rotavirus particle showing the cross section arrangement of viral proteins through the three capsid layers namely: outer (VP4, red; VP7, yellow), inner (VP6, blue) and the inner core (VP2, green). Source: [23].
Rotavirus proteins, genome segments, and structural localization.
| Protein | dsRNA segment no | Location in virus capsid | Function | Numbers of molecules/virion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VP1 | 1 | Core | dsRNA synthesis (RNA-dependent RNA polymerase) | 12 |
| VP2 | 2 | Core | Inner shell protein | 120 |
| VP3 | 3 | Core | Capping enzyme | 12 |
| VP4 (cleaved to VP5 and VP8) | 4 | Outer capsid | Viral attachment, P-type neutralization antigen | 120 |
| VP6 | 6 | Inner capsid | Middle shell protein | 780 |
| VP7 | 9 | Outer capsid | G type neutralization antigen | 780 |
| NSP1 | 5 | INF antagonist | — | |
| NSP2 | 8 | Viroplasm formation | — | |
| NSP3 | 7 | Enhance viral mRNA synthesis, associated with systemic spread | — | |
| NSP4 | 10 | Outer capsid assembly, regulate calcium homeostasis, enterotoxin | — | |
| NSP5 | 11 | Viroplasm formation | — | |
| NSP6 | 11 | Viroplasm formation | — |
Source: [22].
Rotavirus group detected so far in different mammalian and/or avian host species.
| Rotavirus group/species | Host species |
|---|---|
| A | A wide variety of mammalian and avian species |
| B | Humans, cattle, goats, pigs, rats, and sheep |
| C | Humans, cattle, dogs, goats, juvenile ferrets, and pigs |
| D | Chicken and turkey |
| E | Pigs |
| F | Chicken |
| G | Chicken |
| H | Humans and pigs |
Source: [34].
Common RVA G and P genotypes found in humans and animals.
| Host species | Typical RVA VP7 and VP4 genotypes |
|---|---|
| Cattle | G6, G8, G10, P [1], P [5], P [11] |
| Pigs | G3-G5, G9, G11, P [6], P [7] |
| Horses | G3, G14, P [12] |
| Cats and dogs | G3, P [3], P [9] |
| Humans | G1-G4, G9, G12, P [4], P [6], P [8] |
Source: [34].
Geographic distribution of rotavirus serotypes.
| Region | Rotavirus serotypes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G1P [8] (%) | G2P [4] (%) | G3P [8] (%) | G4P [8] (%) | G9 (%) | Other (%) | |
| North America | 73 | 11 | 6 | 1 | 3 | 5 |
| South America | 34 | 23 | 2 | 9 | 16 | 11 |
| Europe | 72 | 9 | 2 | 11 | 4 | 1.4 |
| Australia | 82 | 14 | 1 | 2 | 0.5 | 0.1 |
| Asia | 34 | 13 | 1 | 20 | 12 | 14 |
| Africa | 23 | 2 | 21 | 4 | 7 | 27 |
| Taiwan | 40 | 80 | 27 | 0 | 18 | 8 |
Sources: [39, 40].
Figure 2The rotavirus replication cycle. Source: [32].
Prevalence of rotavirus infection in animals.
| Country | Prevalence rotavirus (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Western Algeria | 14.63 | Ammar et al. [ |
| Northern India | 26.8 | Jindal et al. [ |
| Ethiopia | 16.7 | Abraham et al. [ |
| India | 15.68 | Rai et al. [ |
| Iraq | 15.5 | Al-Robaiee & Al-Farwachi [ |
| Brazil | 20.2 | Alfieri et al. [ |
| Tunisia | 22.8 | Zrelli et al. [ |
| Brazil | 25.1 | Langoni et al. [ |
| Algeria | 21.84 | Kam et al. [ |
| England | 42 | Reynolds et al. [ |
| Scotland | 50 | Snodgrass et al. [ |
| Spain | 42.7 | De la Fuente et al. [ |
| Australia | 79.9 | Izzo et al. [ |