22 results on '"Tenge, Victoria R"'
Search Results
2. Insights into human norovirus cultivation in human intestinal enteroids.
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Ettayebi, Khalil, Kaur, Gurpreet, Patil, Ketki, Dave, Janam, Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi, Tenge, Victoria R., Neill, Frederick H., Xi-Lei Zeng, Speer, Allison L., Di Rienzi, Sara C., Britton, Robert A., Blutt, Sarah E., Crawford, Sue E., Ramani, Sasirekha, Atmar, Robert L., and Estes, Mary K.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Human norovirus exhibits strain-specific sensitivity to host interferon pathways in human intestinal enteroids
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Lin, Shih-Ching, Qu, Lin, Ettayebi, Khalil, Crawford, Sue E., Blutt, Sarah E., Robertson, Matthew J., Zeng, Xi-Lei, Tenge, Victoria R., Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi, Karandikar, Umesh C., Yu, Xiaomin, Coarfa, Cristian, Atmar, Robert L., Ramani, Sasirekha, and Estes, Mary K.
- Published
- 2020
4. Bile acids and ceramide overcome the entry restriction for GII.3 human norovirus replication in human intestinal enteroids
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Murakami, Kosuke, Tenge, Victoria R., Karandikar, Umesh C., Lin, Shih-Ching, Ramani, Sasirekha, Ettayebi, Khalil, Crawford, Sue E., Zeng, Xi-Lei, Neill, Frederick H., Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi, Katayama, Kazuhiko, Graham, David Y., Bieberich, Erhard, Atmar, Robert L., and Estes, Mary K.
- Published
- 2020
5. N-glycoproteomic analyses of human intestinal enteroids, varying in histo-blood group geno- and phenotypes, reveal a wide repertoire of fucosylated glycoproteins.
- Author
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Nilsson, Jonas, Rimkute, Inga, Sihlbom, Carina, Tenge, Victoria R, Lin, Shih-Ching, Atmar, Robert L, Estes, Mary K, and Larson, Göran
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CELL adhesion molecules ,GLYCANS ,GLYCOPROTEINS ,HYDROPHILIC interaction liquid chromatography ,VIRAL gastroenteritis ,MEMBRANE proteins - Abstract
Human noroviruses, globally the main cause of viral gastroenteritis, show strain specific affinity for histo-blood group antigens (HBGA) and can successfully be propagated ex vivo in human intestinal enteroids (HIEs). HIEs established from jejunal stem cells of individuals with different ABO, Lewis and secretor geno- and phenotypes, show varying susceptibility to such infections. Using bottom-up glycoproteomic approaches we have defined and compared the N -linked glycans of glycoproteins of seven jejunal HIEs. Membrane proteins were extracted, trypsin digested, and glycopeptides enriched by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography and analyzed by nanoLC-MS/MS. The Byonic software was used for glycopeptide identification followed by hands-on verifications and interpretations. Glycan structures and attachment sites were identified from MS
2 spectra obtained by higher-energy collision dissociation through analysis of diagnostic saccharide oxonium ions (B-ions), stepwise glycosidic fragmentation of the glycans (Y-ions), and peptide sequence ions (b- and y-ions). Altogether 694 unique glycopeptides from 93 glycoproteins were identified. The N-glycans encompassed pauci- and oligomannose, hybrid- and complex-type structures. Notably, polyfucosylated HBGA-containing glycopeptides of the four glycoproteins tetraspanin-8, carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule 5, sucrose-isomaltase and aminopeptidase N were especially prominent and were characterized in detail and related to donor ABO, Lewis and secretor types of each HIE. Virtually no sialylated N-glycans were identified for these glycoproteins suggesting that terminal sialylation was infrequent compared to fucosylation and HBGA biosynthesis. This approach gives unique site-specific information on the structural complexity of N-linked glycans of glycoproteins of human HIEs and provides a platform for future studies on the role of host glycoproteins in gastrointestinal infectious diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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6. Replication of human noroviruses in stem cell-derived human enteroids
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Ettayebi, Khalil, Crawford, Sue E., Murakami, Kosuke, Broughman, James R., Karandikar, Umesh, Tenge, Victoria R., Neill, Frederick H., Blutt, Sarah E., Zeng, Xi-Lei, Qu, Lin, Kou, Baijun, Opekun, Antone R., Burrin, Douglas, Graham, David Y., Ramani, Sasirekha, Atmar, Robert L., and Estes, Mary K.
- Published
- 2016
7. Mutation of essential Hsp90 co-chaperones SGT1 or CNS1 renders yeast hypersensitive to overexpression of other co-chaperones
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Johnson, Jill L., Zuehlke, Abbey D., Tenge, Victoria R., and Langworthy, Jordan C.
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- 2014
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8. Human norovirus exhibits strain-specific sensitivity to host interferon pathways in human intestinal enteroids.
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Shih-Ching Lin, Lin Qu, Ettayebi, Khalil, Crawford, Sue E., Blutt, Sarah E., Robertson, Matthew J., Xi-Lei Zeng, Tenge, Victoria R., Vijayalakshmi Ayyar, B., Karandikar, Umesh C., Xiaomin Yu, Coarfa, Cristian, Atmar, Robert L., Ramani, Sasirekha, and Estes, Mary K.
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INTERFERONS ,VIRAL gastroenteritis ,ANTIVIRAL agents ,VIRAL replication ,INTERFERON inducers - Abstract
Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are the leading cause of viral gastroenteritis worldwide; yet currently, no vaccines or FDAapproved antiviral drugs are available to counter these pathogens. To understand HuNoV biology and the epithelial response to infection, we performed transcriptomic analyses, RT-qPCR, CRISPR-Cas9 modification of human intestinal enteroid (HIE) cultures, and functional studies with two virus strains (a pandemic GII.4 and a bile acid-dependent GII.3 strain). We identified a predominant type III interferon (IFN)-mediated innate response to HuNoV infection. Replication of both strains is sensitive to exogenous addition of IFNs, suggesting the potential of IFNs as therapeutics. To obtain insight into IFN pathway genes that play a role in the antiviral response to HuNoVs, we developed knockout (KO) HIE lines for IFN alpha and lambda receptors and the signaling molecules, MAVS, STAT1, and STAT2. An unexpected differential response of enhanced replication and virus spread was observed for GII.3, but not the globally dominant GII.4 HuNoV in STAT1-knockout HIEs compared to parental HIEs. These results indicate cellular IFN responses restrict GII.3 but not GII.4 replication. The strain-specific sensitivities of innate responses against HuNoV replication provide one explanation for why GII.4 infections are more widespread and highlight strain specificity as an important factor in HuNoV biology. Genetically modified HIEs for innate immune genes are useful tools for studying immune responses to viral or microbial pathogens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. Bile acids and ceramide overcome the entry restriction for GII.3 human norovirus replication in human intestinal enteroids.
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Kosuke Murakami, Tenge, Victoria R., Karandikar, Umesh C., Shih-Ching Lin, Ramani, Sasirekha, Ettayebi, Khalil, Crawford, Sue E., Xi-Lei Zeng, Neill, Frederick H., Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi, Kazuhiko Katayama, Graham, David Y., Bieberich, Erhard, Atmar, Robert L., and Estes, Mary K.
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BILE acids , *G protein coupled receptors , *FARNESOID X receptor , *SPHINGOMYELINASE - Abstract
Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) cause sporadic and epidemic outbreaks of gastroenteritis in all age groups worldwide. We previously reported that stem cell-derived human intestinal enteroid (HIE) cultures support replication of multiple HuNoV strains and that some strains (e.g., GII.3) replicate only in the presence of bile. Heat- and trypsin-treatment of bile did not reduce GII.3 replication, indicating a nonproteinaceous component in bile functions as an active factor. Here we show that bile acids (BAs) are critical for GII.3 replication and replication correlates with BA hydrophobicity. Using the highly effective BA, glycochenodeoxycholic acid (GCDCA), we show BAs act during the early stage of infection, BA-dependent replication in HIEs is not mediated by detergent effects or classic farnesoid X receptor or Takeda G protein-coupled receptor 5 signaling but involves another G protein-coupled receptor, sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 2, and BA treatment of HIEs increases particle uptake. We also demonstrate that GCDCA induces multiple cellular responses that promote GII.3 replication in HIEs, including enhancement of 1) endosomal uptake, 2) endosomal acidification and subsequent activity of endosomal/lysosomal enzyme acid sphingomyelinase (ASM), and 3) ceramide levels on the apical membrane. Inhibitors of endosomal acidification or ASM reduce GII.3 infection and exogenous addition of ceramide alone permits infection. Furthermore, inhibition of lysosomal exocytosis of ASM, which is required for ceramide production at the apical surface, decreases GII.3 infection. Together, our results support a model where GII.3 exploits rapid BA-mediated cellular endolysosomal dynamic changes and cellular ceramide to enter and replicate in jejunal HIEs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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10. 588 GII.3 HUMAN NOROVIRUS REQUIRES BILE ACID AND CERAMIDE FOR ENTRY AND INFECTION OF HUMAN INTESTINAL ENTEROIDS
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Tenge, Victoria R., Murakami, Kosuke, Karandikar, Umesh C., Lin, Shih-Ching, Ramani, Sasirekha, Ettayebi, Khalil, Crawford, Sue E., Zeng, Xi-Lei, Neill, Frederick H., Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi, Katayama, Kazuhiko, Graham, David Y., Bieberich, Erhard, Atmar, Robert L., and Estes, Mary
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- 2020
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11. Delineation of Interfaces on Human Alpha-Defensins Critical for Human Adenovirus and Human Papillomavirus Inhibition.
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Tenge, Victoria R., Gounder, Anshu P., Wiens, Mayim E., Lu, Wuyuan, and Smith, Jason G.
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HUMAN adenoviruses , *IMMUNE response , *BACTERIAL proteins , *INFECTION - Abstract
Human α-defensins are potent anti-microbial peptides with the ability to neutralize bacterial and viral targets. Single alanine mutagenesis has been used to identify determinants of anti-bacterial activity and binding to bacterial proteins such as anthrax lethal factor. Similar analyses of α-defensin interactions with non-enveloped viruses are limited. We used a comprehensive set of human α-defensin 5 (HD5) and human neutrophil peptide 1 (HNP1) alanine scan mutants in a combination of binding and neutralization assays with human adenovirus (AdV) and human papillomavirus (HPV). We have identified a core of critical hydrophobic residues that are common determinants for all of the virus-defensin interactions that were analyzed, while specificity in viral recognition is conferred by specific surface-exposed charged residues. The hydrophobic residues serve multiple roles in maintaining the tertiary and quaternary structure of the defensins as well as forming an interface for virus binding. Many of the important solvent-exposed residues of HD5 group together to form a critical surface. However, a single discrete binding face was not identified for HNP1. In lieu of whole AdV, we used a recombinant capsid subunit comprised of penton base and fiber in quantitative binding studies and determined that the anti-viral potency of HD5 was a function of stoichiometry rather than affinity. Our studies support a mechanism in which α-defensins depend on hydrophobic and charge-charge interactions to bind at high copy number to these non-enveloped viruses to neutralize infection and provide insight into properties that guide α-defensin anti-viral activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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12. The Ribosomal Biogenesis Protein Utp21 Interacts with Hsp90 and Has Differing Requirements for Hsp90-Associated Proteins.
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Tenge, Victoria R., Knowles, Jared, and Johnson, Jill L.
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RIBOSOMAL proteins , *HEAT shock proteins , *MOLECULAR chaperones , *GENETICS , *NUCLEAR proteins , *PROTEIN folding , *ORIGIN of life - Abstract
The molecular chaperone Hsp90 buffers the effects of genetic variation by assisting the stabilization and folding of multiple clients critical for cell signaling and growth. We identified an interaction of Hsp90 and associated proteins with the essential nucleolar protein, Utp21, part of a large complex required for biogenesis of the small ribosomal subunit. The utp21-S602F mutation, which causes minor defects in otherwise wild-type yeast, exhibited severe or lethal growth defects when combined with mutations in Hsp90 or co-chaperones. WT Utp21 and Utp21-S602F exhibited similar interactions with Hsp90, and steady-state levels of WT Utp21 were reduced upon Hsp90 mutation or inhibition. Mutations in the human homolog of UTP21, WDR36, have been associated with adult-onset primary open-angle glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness worldwide. Three different mutant forms of Utp21 analogous to glaucoma-associated WDR36 mutations exhibit reduced levels in yeast cells expressing mutations in Hsp90 or associated chaperones, suggesting that Hsp90 and co-chaperones buffer the effects of those mutations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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13. Glycan Recognition in Human Norovirus Infections.
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Tenge, Victoria R., Hu, Liya, Prasad, B. V. Venkataram, Larson, Göran, Atmar, Robert L., Estes, Mary K., and Ramani, Sasirekha
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GLYCANS , *NOROVIRUS diseases , *CELL membranes , *INTESTINES , *HUMAN beings , *CARBOHYDRATES , *GLYCOCONJUGATES - Abstract
Recognition of cell-surface glycans is an important step in the attachment of several viruses to susceptible host cells. The molecular basis of glycan interactions and their functional consequences are well studied for human norovirus (HuNoV), an important gastrointestinal pathogen. Histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs), a family of fucosylated carbohydrate structures that are present on the cell surface, are utilized by HuNoVs to initially bind to cells. In this review, we describe the discovery of HBGAs as genetic susceptibility factors for HuNoV infection and review biochemical and structural studies investigating HuNoV binding to different HBGA glycans. Recently, human intestinal enteroids (HIEs) were developed as a laboratory cultivation system for HuNoV. We review how the use of this novel culture system has confirmed that fucosylated HBGAs are necessary and sufficient for infection by several HuNoV strains, describe mechanisms of antibody-mediated neutralization of infection that involve blocking of HuNoV binding to HBGAs, and discuss the potential for using the HIE model to answer unresolved questions on viral interactions with HBGAs and other glycans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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14. Bile Goes Viral.
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Tenge, Victoria R., Murakami, Kosuke, Salmen, Wilhelm, Lin, Shih-Ching, Crawford, Sue E., Neill, Frederick H., Prasad, B. V. Venkataram, Atmar, Robert L., and Estes, Mary K.
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FARNESOID X receptor , *HEPATITIS B virus , *DRUG target , *NOROVIRUS diseases , *ENTEROHEPATIC circulation , *LIVER cells , *VIRAL tropism - Abstract
Laboratory cultivation of viruses is critical for determining requirements for viral replication, developing detection methods, identifying drug targets, and developing antivirals. Several viruses have a history of recalcitrance towards robust replication in laboratory cell lines, including human noroviruses and hepatitis B and C viruses. These viruses have tropism for tissue components of the enterohepatic circulation system: the intestine and liver, respectively. The purpose of this review is to discuss how key enterohepatic signaling molecules, bile acids (BAs), and BA receptors are involved in the replication of these viruses and how manipulation of these factors was useful in the development and/or optimization of culture systems for these viruses. BAs have replication-promoting activities through several key mechanisms: (1) affecting cellular uptake, membrane lipid composition, and endocytic acidification; (2) directly interacting with viral capsids to influence binding to cells; and (3) modulating the innate immune response. Additionally, expression of the Na+-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide BA receptor in continuous liver cell lines is critical for hepatitis B virus entry and robust replication in laboratory culture. Viruses are capable of hijacking normal cellular functions, and understanding the role of BAs and BA receptors, components of the enterohepatic system, is valuable for expanding our knowledge on the mechanisms of norovirus and hepatitis B and C virus replication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. Human Norovirus Cultivation in Nontransformed Stem Cell-Derived Human Intestinal Enteroid Cultures: Success and Challenges.
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Estes, Mary K., Ettayebi, Khalil, Tenge, Victoria R., Murakami, Kosuke, Karandikar, Umesh, Lin, Shih-Ching, Ayyar, B. Vijayalakshmi, Cortes-Penfield, Nicolas W., Haga, Kei, Neill, Frederick H., Opekun, Antone R., Broughman, James R., Zeng, Xi-Lei, Blutt, Sarah E., Crawford, Sue E., Ramani, Sasirekha, Graham, David Y., and Atmar, Robert L.
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NOROVIRUS diseases ,NOROVIRUSES ,EPITHELIAL cell culture ,VIRAL gastroenteritis ,DEVELOPMENTAL biology - Abstract
Noroviruses, in the genus Norovirus, are a significant cause of viral gastroenteritis in humans and animals. For almost 50 years, the lack of a cultivation system for human noroviruses (HuNoVs) was a major barrier to understanding virus biology and the development of effective antiviral strategies. This review presents a historical perspective of the development of a cultivation system for HuNoVs in human intestinal epithelial cell cultures. Successful cultivation was based on the discovery of genetically-encoded host factors required for infection, knowledge of the site of infection in humans, and advances in the cultivation of human intestinal epithelial cells achieved by developmental and stem cell biologists. The human stem cell-derived enteroid cultivation system recapitulates the multicellular, physiologically active human intestinal epithelium, and allows studies of virus-specific replication requirements, evaluation of human host-pathogen interactions, and supports the pre-clinical assessment of methods to prevent and treat HuNoV infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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16. Histo-blood group antigens of glycosphingolipids predict susceptibility of human intestinal enteroids to norovirus infection.
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Rimkute, Inga, Thorsteinsson, Konrad, Henricsson, Marcus, Tenge, Victoria R., Xiaoming Yu, Shih-Ching Lin, Haga, Kei, Atmar, Robert L., Lycke, Nils, Nilsson, Jonas, Estes, Mary K., Bally, Marta, and Larson, Göran
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NOROVIRUS diseases , *GLYCOSPHINGOLIPIDS , *BLOOD group antigens , *ABO blood group system , *MEMBRANE lipids , *VIRUS-like particles , *ANTIGENS , *COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
The molecular mechanisms behind infection and propagation of human restricted pathogens such as human norovirus (HuNoV) have defied interrogation because they were previously unculturable. However, human intestinal enteroids (HIEs) have emerged to offer unique ex vivo models for targeted studies of intestinal biology, including inflammatory and infectious diseases. Carbohydrate-dependent histo-blood group antigens (HBGAs) are known to be critical for clinical infection. To explore whether HBGAs of glycosphingolipids contribute to HuNoV infection, we obtained HIE cultures established from stem cells isolated from jejunal biopsies of six individuals with different ABO, Lewis, and secretor genotypes. We analyzed their glycerolipid and sphingolipid compositions and quantified interaction kinetics and the affinity of HuNoV virus-like particles (VLPs) to lipid vesicles produced from the individual HIE-lipid extracts. All HIEs had a similar lipid and glycerolipid composition. Sphingolipids included HBGA-related type 1 chain glycosphingolipids (GSLs), with HBGA epitopes corresponding to the geno- and phenotypes of the different HIEs. As revealed by single-particle interaction studies of Sydney GII.4 VLPs with glycosphingolipid-containing HIE membranes, both binding kinetics and affinities explain the patterns of susceptibility toward GII.4 infection for individual HIEs. This is the first time norovirus VLPs have been shown to interact specifically with secretor gene-dependent GSLs embedded in lipid membranes of HIEs that propagate GII.4 HuNoV ex vivo, highlighting the potential of HIEs for advanced future studies of intestinal glycobiology and host-pathogen interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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17. Replication of Human Norovirus RNA in Mammalian Cells Reveals Lack of Interferon Response.
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Lin Qu, Kosuke Murakami, Broughman, James R., Lay, Margarita K., Guix, Susana, Tenge, Victoria R., Atmar, Robert L., and Estes, Mary K.
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NOROVIRUSES , *VIRAL replication , *MAMMALIAN cell cycle , *INTERFERONS , *GASTROENTERITIS , *GENE transfection - Abstract
Human noroviruses (HuNoVs), named after the prototype strain Norwalk virus (NV), are a leading cause of acute gastroenteritis outbreaks worldwide. Studies on the related murine norovirus (MNV) have demonstrated the importance of an interferon (IFN) response in host control of virus replication, but this remains unclear for HuNoVs. Despite the lack of an efficient cell culture infection system, transfection of stool-isolated NV RNA into mammalian cells leads to viral RNA replication and virus production. Using this system, we show here that NV RNA replication is sensitive to type I (α/β) and III (interleukin-29 [IL-29]) IFN treatment. However, in cells capable of a strong IFN response to Sendai virus (SeV) and poly(I·C), NV RNA replicates efficiently and generates double-stranded RNA without inducing a detectable IFN response. Replication of HuNoV genogroup GII.3 strain U201 RNA, generated from a reverse genetics system, also does not induce an IFN response. Consistent with a lack of IFN induction, NV RNA replication is enhanced neither by neutralization of type I/III IFNs through neutralizing antibodies or the soluble IFN decoy receptor B18R nor by short hairpin RNA (shRNA) knockdown of mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS) or interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) in the IFN induction pathways. In contrast to other positive-strand RNA viruses that block IFN induction by targeting MAVS for degradation, MAVS is not degraded in NV RNA-replicating cells, and an SeV-induced IFN response is not blocked. Together, these results indicate that HuNoV RNA replication in mammalian cells does not induce an IFN response, suggesting that the epithelial IFN response may play a limited role in host restriction of HuNoV replication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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18. Insights into Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids.
- Author
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Ettayebi K, Kaur G, Patil K, Dave J, Ayyar BV, Tenge VR, Neill FH, Zeng XL, Speer AL, Di Rienzi SC, Britton RA, Blutt SE, Crawford SE, Ramani S, Atmar RL, and Estes MK
- Abstract
Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are a significant cause of epidemic and sporadic acute gastroenteritis worldwide. The lack of a reproducible culture system hindered the study of HuNoV replication and pathogenesis for almost a half-century. This barrier was overcome with our successful cultivation of multiple HuNoV strains in human intestinal enteroids (HIEs), which has significantly advanced HuNoV research. We optimized culture media conditions and generated genetically-modified HIE cultures to enhance HuNoV replication in HIEs. Building upon these achievements, we now present new insights to this culture system, which involve testing different media, unique HIE lines, and additional virus strains. HuNoV infectivity was evaluated and compared in new HIE models, including HIEs generated from different intestinal segments of individual adult organ donors, HIEs from human intestinal organoids produced from directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells into intestinal organoids that were transplanted and matured in mice before making enteroids (H9tHIEs), genetically-engineered (J4 FUT2 knock-in [ KI ], J2 STAT1 knock-out [ KO ]) HIEs, as well as HIEs derived from a patient with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) and from infants. Our findings reveal that small intestinal HIEs, but not colonoids, from adults, H9tHIEs, HIEs from a CVID patient, and HIEs from infants support HuNoV replication with segment and strain-specific differences in viral infection. J4 FUT2-KI HIEs exhibit the highest susceptibility to HuNoV infection, allowing the cultivation of a broader range of GI and GII HuNoV strains than previously reported. Overall, these results contribute to a deeper understanding of HuNoVs and highlight the transformative potential of HIE cultures in HuNoV research., Importance: HuNoVs cause global diarrheal illness and chronic infections in immunocompromised patients. This manuscript reports approaches for cultivating HuNoVs in secretor positive human intestinal enteroids (HIEs). HuNoV infectivity was compared in new HIE models, including ones from i) different intestinal segments of single donors, ii) human embryonic stem cell-derived organoids transplanted into mice, iii) genetically-modified lines, and iv) a patient with chronic variable immunodeficiency disease. HIEs from small intestine, but not colon, support HuNoV replication with donor, segment and strain-specific variations. Unexpectedly, HIEs from one donor are resistant to GII.3 infection. The genetically-modified J4 FUT2-KI HIEs enable cultivation of a broad range of GI and GII genotypes. New insights into strain-specific differences in HuNoV replication in HIEs support this platform for advancing understanding of HuNoV biology and developing potential therapeutics.
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- 2024
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19. New Insights and Enhanced Human Norovirus Cultivation in Human Intestinal Enteroids.
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Ettayebi K, Tenge VR, Cortes-Penfield NW, Crawford SE, Neill FH, Zeng XL, Yu X, Ayyar BV, Burrin D, Ramani S, Atmar RL, and Estes MK
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Culture Media, Humans, Infant, Intestinal Mucosa cytology, Stem Cells cytology, Virus Replication physiology, Intestinal Mucosa virology, Norovirus growth & development, Organoids virology
- Abstract
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., (Copyright © 2021 Ettayebi et al.)
- Published
- 2021
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20. Genetic Manipulation of Human Intestinal Enteroids Demonstrates the Necessity of a Functional Fucosyltransferase 2 Gene for Secretor-Dependent Human Norovirus Infection.
- Author
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Haga K, Ettayebi K, Tenge VR, Karandikar UC, Lewis MA, Lin SC, Neill FH, Ayyar BV, Zeng XL, Larson G, Ramani S, Atmar RL, and Estes MK
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- Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Intestine, Small cytology, Intestine, Small virology, Norovirus pathogenicity, Organoids enzymology, Virus Replication, Galactoside 2-alpha-L-fucosyltransferase, Blood Group Antigens metabolism, Caliciviridae Infections genetics, Fucosyltransferases genetics, Fucosyltransferases metabolism, Intestine, Small enzymology, Organoids virology
- Abstract
Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are the leading cause of nonbacterial gastroenteritis worldwide. Histo-blood group antigen (HBGA) expression is an important susceptibility factor for HuNoV infection based on controlled human infection models and epidemiologic studies that show an association of secretor status with infection caused by several genotypes. The fucosyltransferase 2 gene ( FUT2 ) affects HBGA expression in intestinal epithelial cells; secretors express a functional FUT2 enzyme, while nonsecretors lack this enzyme and are highly resistant to infection and gastroenteritis caused by many HuNoV strains. These epidemiologic associations are confirmed by infections in stem cell-derived human intestinal enteroid (HIE) cultures. GII.4 HuNoV does not replicate in HIE cultures derived from nonsecretor individuals, while HIEs from secretors are permissive to infection. However, whether FUT2 expression alone is critical for infection remains unproven, since routinely used secretor-positive transformed cell lines are resistant to HuNoV replication. To evaluate the role of FUT2 in HuNoV replication, we used CRISPR or overexpression to genetically manipulate FUT2 gene function to produce isogenic HIE lines with or without FUT2 expression. We show that FUT2 expression alone affects both HuNoV binding to the HIE cell surface and susceptibility to HuNoV infection. These findings indicate that initial binding to a molecule(s) glycosylated by FUT2 is critical for HuNoV infection and that the HuNoV receptor is present in nonsecretor HIEs. In addition to HuNoV studies, these isogenic HIE lines will be useful tools to study other enteric microbes where infection and/or disease outcome is associated with secretor status. IMPORTANCE Several studies have demonstrated that secretor status is associated with susceptibility to human norovirus (HuNoV) infection; however, previous reports found that FUT2 expression is not sufficient to allow infection with HuNoV in a variety of continuous laboratory cell lines. Which cellular factor(s) regulates susceptibility to HuNoV infection remains unknown. We used genetic manipulation of HIE cultures to show that secretor status determined by FUT2 gene expression is necessary and sufficient to support HuNoV replication based on analyses of isogenic lines that lack or express FUT2. Fucosylation of HBGAs is critical for initial binding and for modification of another putative receptor(s) in HIEs needed for virus uptake or uncoating and necessary for successful infection by GI.1 and several GII HuNoV strains., (Copyright © 2020 Haga et al.)
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- 2020
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21. Replication of Human Norovirus RNA in Mammalian Cells Reveals Lack of Interferon Response.
- Author
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Qu L, Murakami K, Broughman JR, Lay MK, Guix S, Tenge VR, Atmar RL, and Estes MK
- Subjects
- Antiviral Agents metabolism, Cell Line, Epithelial Cells immunology, Epithelial Cells virology, Humans, Interferons, Immune Evasion, Interferon Type I metabolism, Interleukins metabolism, Norovirus immunology, Norovirus physiology, RNA, Viral metabolism, Virus Replication
- Abstract
Unlabelled: Human noroviruses (HuNoVs), named after the prototype strain Norwalk virus (NV), are a leading cause of acute gastroenteritis outbreaks worldwide. Studies on the related murine norovirus (MNV) have demonstrated the importance of an interferon (IFN) response in host control of virus replication, but this remains unclear for HuNoVs. Despite the lack of an efficient cell culture infection system, transfection of stool-isolated NV RNA into mammalian cells leads to viral RNA replication and virus production. Using this system, we show here that NV RNA replication is sensitive to type I (α/β) and III (interleukin-29 [IL-29]) IFN treatment. However, in cells capable of a strong IFN response to Sendai virus (SeV) and poly(I·C), NV RNA replicates efficiently and generates double-stranded RNA without inducing a detectable IFN response. Replication of HuNoV genogroup GII.3 strain U201 RNA, generated from a reverse genetics system, also does not induce an IFN response. Consistent with a lack of IFN induction, NV RNA replication is enhanced neither by neutralization of type I/III IFNs through neutralizing antibodies or the soluble IFN decoy receptor B18R nor by short hairpin RNA (shRNA) knockdown of mitochondrial antiviral signaling protein (MAVS) or interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) in the IFN induction pathways. In contrast to other positive-strand RNA viruses that block IFN induction by targeting MAVS for degradation, MAVS is not degraded in NV RNA-replicating cells, and an SeV-induced IFN response is not blocked. Together, these results indicate that HuNoV RNA replication in mammalian cells does not induce an IFN response, suggesting that the epithelial IFN response may play a limited role in host restriction of HuNoV replication., Importance: Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are a leading cause of epidemic gastroenteritis worldwide. Due to lack of an efficient cell culture system and robust small-animal model, little is known about the innate host defense to these viruses. Studies on murine norovirus (MNV) have shown the importance of an interferon (IFN) response in host control of MNV replication, but this remains unclear for HuNoVs. Here, we investigated the IFN response to HuNoV RNA replication in mammalian cells using Norwalk virus stool RNA transfection, a reverse genetics system, IFN neutralization reagents, and shRNA knockdown methods. Our results show that HuNoV RNA replication in mammalian epithelial cells does not induce an IFN response, nor can it be enhanced by blocking the IFN response. These results suggest a limited role of the epithelial IFN response in host control of HuNoV RNA replication, providing important insights into our understanding of the host defense to HuNoVs that differs from that to MNV., (Copyright © 2016, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Hsp90 cochaperones Cpr6, Cpr7, and Cns1 interact with the intact ribosome.
- Author
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Tenge VR, Zuehlke AD, Shrestha N, and Johnson JL
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Cinnamates pharmacology, Peptidyl-Prolyl Isomerase F, Cyclophilins chemistry, Cyclophilins genetics, Hygromycin B analogs & derivatives, Hygromycin B pharmacology, Molecular Chaperones chemistry, Molecular Chaperones genetics, Molecular Sequence Data, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Saccharomyces cerevisiae drug effects, Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetics, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins chemistry, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins genetics, Cyclophilins metabolism, Molecular Chaperones metabolism, Ribosomes metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolism, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins metabolism
- Abstract
The abundant molecular chaperone Hsp90 is essential for the folding and stabilization of hundreds of distinct client proteins. Hsp90 is assisted by multiple cochaperones that modulate Hsp90's ATPase activity and/or promote client interaction, but the in vivo functions of many of these cochaperones are largely unknown. We found that Cpr6, Cpr7, and Cns1 interact with the intact ribosome and that Saccharomyces cerevisiae lacking CPR7 or containing mutations in CNS1 exhibited sensitivity to the translation inhibitor hygromycin. Cpr6 contains a peptidyl-prolyl isomerase (PPIase) domain and a tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) domain flanked by charged regions. Truncation or alteration of basic residues near the carboxy terminus of Cpr6 disrupted ribosome interaction. Cns1 contains an amino-terminal TPR domain and a poorly characterized carboxy-terminal domain. The isolated carboxy-terminal domain was able to interact with the ribosome. Although loss of CPR6 does not cause noticeable growth defects, overexpression of CPR6 results in enhanced growth defects in cells expressing the temperature-sensitive cns1-G90D mutation (the G-to-D change at position 90 encoded by cns1). Cpr6 mutants that exhibit reduced ribosome interaction failed to cause growth defects, indicating that ribosome interaction is required for in vivo functions of Cpr6. Together, these results represent a novel link between the Hsp90 molecular-chaperone machine and protein synthesis., (Copyright © 2015, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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