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Norovirus Infection in Young Nicaraguan Children Induces Durable and Genotype-Specific Antibody Immunity

There are significant challenges to the development of a pediatric norovirus vaccine, mainly due to the antigenic diversity among strains infecting young children. Characterizing human norovirus serotypes and understanding norovirus immunity in naïve children would provide key information for design...

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Autores principales: Brewer-Jensen, Paul D., Reyes, Yaoska, Becker-Dreps, Sylvia, González, Fredman, Mallory, Michael L., Gutiérrez, Lester, Zepeda, Omar, Centeno, Edwing, Vielot, Nadja, Diez-Valcarce, Marta, Vinjé, Jan, Baric, Ralph, Lindesmith, Lisa C., Bucardo, Filemon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9501366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36146859
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14092053
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author Brewer-Jensen, Paul D.
Reyes, Yaoska
Becker-Dreps, Sylvia
González, Fredman
Mallory, Michael L.
Gutiérrez, Lester
Zepeda, Omar
Centeno, Edwing
Vielot, Nadja
Diez-Valcarce, Marta
Vinjé, Jan
Baric, Ralph
Lindesmith, Lisa C.
Bucardo, Filemon
author_facet Brewer-Jensen, Paul D.
Reyes, Yaoska
Becker-Dreps, Sylvia
González, Fredman
Mallory, Michael L.
Gutiérrez, Lester
Zepeda, Omar
Centeno, Edwing
Vielot, Nadja
Diez-Valcarce, Marta
Vinjé, Jan
Baric, Ralph
Lindesmith, Lisa C.
Bucardo, Filemon
author_sort Brewer-Jensen, Paul D.
collection PubMed
description There are significant challenges to the development of a pediatric norovirus vaccine, mainly due to the antigenic diversity among strains infecting young children. Characterizing human norovirus serotypes and understanding norovirus immunity in naïve children would provide key information for designing rational vaccine platforms. In this study, 26 Nicaraguan children experiencing their first norovirus acute gastroenteritis (AGE) episode during the first 18 months of life were investigated. We used a surrogate neutralization assay that measured antibodies blocking the binding of 13 different norovirus virus-like particles (VLPs) to histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs) in pre- and post-infection sera. To assess for asymptomatic norovirus infections, stools from asymptomatic children were collected monthly, screened for norovirus by RT-qPCR and genotyped by sequencing. Seroconversion of an HBGA-blocking antibody matched the infecting genotype in 25 (96%) of the 26 children. A subset of 13 (50%) and 4 (15%) of the 26 children experienced monotypic GII and GI seroconversion, respectively, strongly suggesting a type-specific response in naïve children, and 9 (35%) showed multitypic seroconversion. The most frequent pairing in multitypic seroconversion (8/12) were GII.4 Sydney and GII.12 noroviruses, both co-circulating at the time. Blocking antibody titers to these two genotypes did not correlate with each other, suggesting multiple exposure rather than cross-reactivity between genotypes. In addition, GII titers remained consistent for at least 19 months post-infection, demonstrating durable immunity. In conclusion, the first natural norovirus gastroenteritis episodes in these young children were dominated by a limited number of genotypes and induced responses of antibodies blocking binding of norovirus VLPs in a genotype-specific manner, suggesting that an effective pediatric norovirus vaccine likely needs to be multivalent and include globally dominant genotypes. The duration of protection from natural infections provides optimism for pediatric norovirus vaccines administered early in life.
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spelling pubmed-95013662022-09-24 Norovirus Infection in Young Nicaraguan Children Induces Durable and Genotype-Specific Antibody Immunity Brewer-Jensen, Paul D. Reyes, Yaoska Becker-Dreps, Sylvia González, Fredman Mallory, Michael L. Gutiérrez, Lester Zepeda, Omar Centeno, Edwing Vielot, Nadja Diez-Valcarce, Marta Vinjé, Jan Baric, Ralph Lindesmith, Lisa C. Bucardo, Filemon Viruses Article There are significant challenges to the development of a pediatric norovirus vaccine, mainly due to the antigenic diversity among strains infecting young children. Characterizing human norovirus serotypes and understanding norovirus immunity in naïve children would provide key information for designing rational vaccine platforms. In this study, 26 Nicaraguan children experiencing their first norovirus acute gastroenteritis (AGE) episode during the first 18 months of life were investigated. We used a surrogate neutralization assay that measured antibodies blocking the binding of 13 different norovirus virus-like particles (VLPs) to histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs) in pre- and post-infection sera. To assess for asymptomatic norovirus infections, stools from asymptomatic children were collected monthly, screened for norovirus by RT-qPCR and genotyped by sequencing. Seroconversion of an HBGA-blocking antibody matched the infecting genotype in 25 (96%) of the 26 children. A subset of 13 (50%) and 4 (15%) of the 26 children experienced monotypic GII and GI seroconversion, respectively, strongly suggesting a type-specific response in naïve children, and 9 (35%) showed multitypic seroconversion. The most frequent pairing in multitypic seroconversion (8/12) were GII.4 Sydney and GII.12 noroviruses, both co-circulating at the time. Blocking antibody titers to these two genotypes did not correlate with each other, suggesting multiple exposure rather than cross-reactivity between genotypes. In addition, GII titers remained consistent for at least 19 months post-infection, demonstrating durable immunity. In conclusion, the first natural norovirus gastroenteritis episodes in these young children were dominated by a limited number of genotypes and induced responses of antibodies blocking binding of norovirus VLPs in a genotype-specific manner, suggesting that an effective pediatric norovirus vaccine likely needs to be multivalent and include globally dominant genotypes. The duration of protection from natural infections provides optimism for pediatric norovirus vaccines administered early in life. MDPI 2022-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9501366/ /pubmed/36146859 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14092053 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Brewer-Jensen, Paul D.
Reyes, Yaoska
Becker-Dreps, Sylvia
González, Fredman
Mallory, Michael L.
Gutiérrez, Lester
Zepeda, Omar
Centeno, Edwing
Vielot, Nadja
Diez-Valcarce, Marta
Vinjé, Jan
Baric, Ralph
Lindesmith, Lisa C.
Bucardo, Filemon
Norovirus Infection in Young Nicaraguan Children Induces Durable and Genotype-Specific Antibody Immunity
title Norovirus Infection in Young Nicaraguan Children Induces Durable and Genotype-Specific Antibody Immunity
title_full Norovirus Infection in Young Nicaraguan Children Induces Durable and Genotype-Specific Antibody Immunity
title_fullStr Norovirus Infection in Young Nicaraguan Children Induces Durable and Genotype-Specific Antibody Immunity
title_full_unstemmed Norovirus Infection in Young Nicaraguan Children Induces Durable and Genotype-Specific Antibody Immunity
title_short Norovirus Infection in Young Nicaraguan Children Induces Durable and Genotype-Specific Antibody Immunity
title_sort norovirus infection in young nicaraguan children induces durable and genotype-specific antibody immunity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9501366/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36146859
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14092053
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