Literature DB >> 6305756

Determinants of reovirus interaction with the intestinal M cells and absorptive cells of murine intestine.

J L Wolf, R S Kauffman, R Finberg, R Dambrauskas, B N Fields, J S Trier.   

Abstract

Reovirus type 1 penetrates the gastrointestinal tract in suckling mice via specialized epithelial cells, designated membranous cells, or M cells, located in the epithelium overlying Peyer's patches. We have examined whether the interaction of reovirus with murine mucosa of in situ closed ileal loops is influenced by mouse age or strain or reovirus serotype. Neither mouse age (suckling or adult), strain (C3H/HeJ or Balb/cJ), nor reovirus serotype (types 1 and 3) affected reovirus adherence to and transport through M cells. In all conditions, reovirions adhered to the M-cell surface and were transported across M cells in endocytic vesicles. The adherence to and endocytosis by M cells of type 1 reovirus and reassortants with the viral hemagglutinin of type 1 were selective in suckling mice; type 1 virus was not adherent to nor endocytosed by absorptive cells. In adult mice, type 1 reovirions adhered to the surface of a minority of absorptive cells but were never seen within absorptive cell cytoplasm. In contrast, type 3 reovirus and reassortants with the viral hemagglutinin of type 3 adhered to and were endocytosed not only by M cells but also by absorptive cells of suckling mice. Virions accumulated within lysosomelike bodies in absorptive cells but transport of virions across absorptive cells was not observed. These studies indicate that (a) adherence of reovirus to the apical surface of and transcellular transport by M cells is independent of viral serotype or viral surface proteins, (b) adherence of reovirus to and transcellular transport by M cells is independent of mouse age after 9 days and comparable in two mouse strains, and (c) adherence of reovirus to and their endocytosis by absorptive cells of suckling mice is determined by the viral hemagglutinin (sigma 1 protein).

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6305756

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gastroenterology        ISSN: 0016-5085            Impact factor:   22.682


  55 in total

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7.  Intraluminal proteolytic activation plays an important role in replication of type 1 reovirus in the intestines of neonatal mice.

Authors:  D M Bass; D Bodkin; R Dambrauskas; J S Trier; B N Fields; J L Wolf
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8.  Orally administered microencapsulated reovirus can bypass suckled, neutralizing maternal antibody that inhibits active immunization of neonates.

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9.  Lymphatic Type 1 Interferon Responses Are Critical for Control of Systemic Reovirus Dissemination.

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10.  The role of M cells of human nasopharyngeal lymphoid tissue in influenza virus sampling.

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Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2003-10-10       Impact factor: 4.064

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