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New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids

Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are the leading cause of epidemic and sporadic acute gastroenteritis worldwide. We previously demonstrated human intestinal stem cell-derived enteroids (HIEs) support cultivation of several HuNoV strains. However, HIEs did not support virus replication from every HuNoV-pos...

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Autores principales: Ettayebi, Khalil, Tenge, Victoria R., Cortes-Penfield, Nicolas W., Crawford, Sue E., Neill, Frederick H., Zeng, Xi-Lei, Yu, Xiaomin, Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi, Burrin, Douglas, Ramani, Sasirekha, Atmar, Robert L., Estes, Mary K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7885322/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33504663
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.01136-20
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author Ettayebi, Khalil
Tenge, Victoria R.
Cortes-Penfield, Nicolas W.
Crawford, Sue E.
Neill, Frederick H.
Zeng, Xi-Lei
Yu, Xiaomin
Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi
Burrin, Douglas
Ramani, Sasirekha
Atmar, Robert L.
Estes, Mary K.
author_facet Ettayebi, Khalil
Tenge, Victoria R.
Cortes-Penfield, Nicolas W.
Crawford, Sue E.
Neill, Frederick H.
Zeng, Xi-Lei
Yu, Xiaomin
Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi
Burrin, Douglas
Ramani, Sasirekha
Atmar, Robert L.
Estes, Mary K.
author_sort Ettayebi, Khalil
collection PubMed
description Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are the leading cause of epidemic and sporadic acute gastroenteritis worldwide. We previously demonstrated human intestinal stem cell-derived enteroids (HIEs) support cultivation of several HuNoV strains. However, HIEs did not support virus replication from every HuNoV-positive stool sample, which led us to test and optimize new medium conditions, identify characteristics of stool samples that allow replication, and evaluate consistency of replication over time. Optimization of our HIE-HuNoV culture system has shown the following: (i) a new HIE culture medium made with conditioned medium from a single cell line and commercial media promotes robust replication of HuNoV strains that replicated poorly in HIEs grown in our original culture medium made with conditioned media from 3 separate cell lines; (ii) GI.1, 11 GII genotypes (GII.1, GII.2, GII.3, GII.4, GII.6, GII.7, GII.8, GII.12, GII.13, GII.14, and GII.17), and six GII.4 variants can be cultivated in HIEs; (iii) successful replication is more likely with virus in stools with higher virus titers; (iv) GII.4_Sydney_2012 virus replication was reproducible over 3 years; and (v) HuNoV infection is restricted to the small intestine, based on replication of two viral strains in duodenal and ileal HIEs, but not colonoids, from two susceptible donors. These results improve the HIE culture system for HuNoV replication. Use of HIEs by several laboratories worldwide to study the molecular mechanisms that regulate HuNoV replication confirms the usefulness of this culture system, and our optimized methods for virus replication will advance the development of effective therapies and methods for virus control. IMPORTANCE Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are highly contagious and cause acute and sporadic diarrheal illness in all age groups. In addition, chronic infections occur in immunocompromised cancer and transplant patients. These viruses are antigenically and genetically diverse, and there are strain-specific differences in binding to cellular attachment factors. In addition, new discoveries are being made on strain-specific differences in virus entry and replication and the epithelial cell response to infection in human intestinal enteroids. Human intestinal enteroids are a biologically relevant model to study HuNoVs; however, not all strains can be cultivated at this time. A complete understanding of HuNoV biology thus requires cultivation conditions that will allow the replication of multiple strains. We report optimization of HuNoV cultivation in human intestinal enteroid cultures to increase the numbers of cultivatable strains and the magnitude of replication, which is critical for testing antivirals, neutralizing antibodies, and methods of virus inactivation.
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spelling pubmed-78853222021-02-19 New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids Ettayebi, Khalil Tenge, Victoria R. Cortes-Penfield, Nicolas W. Crawford, Sue E. Neill, Frederick H. Zeng, Xi-Lei Yu, Xiaomin Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi Burrin, Douglas Ramani, Sasirekha Atmar, Robert L. Estes, Mary K. mSphere Research Article Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are the leading cause of epidemic and sporadic acute gastroenteritis worldwide. We previously demonstrated human intestinal stem cell-derived enteroids (HIEs) support cultivation of several HuNoV strains. However, HIEs did not support virus replication from every HuNoV-positive stool sample, which led us to test and optimize new medium conditions, identify characteristics of stool samples that allow replication, and evaluate consistency of replication over time. Optimization of our HIE-HuNoV culture system has shown the following: (i) a new HIE culture medium made with conditioned medium from a single cell line and commercial media promotes robust replication of HuNoV strains that replicated poorly in HIEs grown in our original culture medium made with conditioned media from 3 separate cell lines; (ii) GI.1, 11 GII genotypes (GII.1, GII.2, GII.3, GII.4, GII.6, GII.7, GII.8, GII.12, GII.13, GII.14, and GII.17), and six GII.4 variants can be cultivated in HIEs; (iii) successful replication is more likely with virus in stools with higher virus titers; (iv) GII.4_Sydney_2012 virus replication was reproducible over 3 years; and (v) HuNoV infection is restricted to the small intestine, based on replication of two viral strains in duodenal and ileal HIEs, but not colonoids, from two susceptible donors. These results improve the HIE culture system for HuNoV replication. Use of HIEs by several laboratories worldwide to study the molecular mechanisms that regulate HuNoV replication confirms the usefulness of this culture system, and our optimized methods for virus replication will advance the development of effective therapies and methods for virus control. IMPORTANCE Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are highly contagious and cause acute and sporadic diarrheal illness in all age groups. In addition, chronic infections occur in immunocompromised cancer and transplant patients. These viruses are antigenically and genetically diverse, and there are strain-specific differences in binding to cellular attachment factors. In addition, new discoveries are being made on strain-specific differences in virus entry and replication and the epithelial cell response to infection in human intestinal enteroids. Human intestinal enteroids are a biologically relevant model to study HuNoVs; however, not all strains can be cultivated at this time. A complete understanding of HuNoV biology thus requires cultivation conditions that will allow the replication of multiple strains. We report optimization of HuNoV cultivation in human intestinal enteroid cultures to increase the numbers of cultivatable strains and the magnitude of replication, which is critical for testing antivirals, neutralizing antibodies, and methods of virus inactivation. American Society for Microbiology 2021-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC7885322/ /pubmed/33504663 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.01136-20 Text en Copyright © 2021 Ettayebi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Ettayebi, Khalil
Tenge, Victoria R.
Cortes-Penfield, Nicolas W.
Crawford, Sue E.
Neill, Frederick H.
Zeng, Xi-Lei
Yu, Xiaomin
Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi
Burrin, Douglas
Ramani, Sasirekha
Atmar, Robert L.
Estes, Mary K.
New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids
title New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids
title_full New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids
title_fullStr New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids
title_full_unstemmed New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids
title_short New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids
title_sort new insights and enhanced human norovirus cultivation in human intestinal enteroids
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7885322/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33504663
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.01136-20
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