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Group A Rotavirus Infection and Age-Dependent Diarrheal Disease in Rats: a New Animal Model To Study the Pathophysiology of Rotavirus Infection
- Source :
- Journal of Virology. 76:41-57
- Publication Year :
- 2002
- Publisher :
- American Society for Microbiology, 2002.
-
Abstract
- Group A rotaviruses are major pathogens causing acute gastroenteritis in children and animals. To determine if group A rotavirus replicates and induces disease in rats, antibody-negative Lewis neonatal or adult rats were inoculated orally with tissue culture-adapted human (Wa, WI61, and HAL1166), simian (rhesus rotavirus [RRV] and SA11), bovine (WC3), lapine (ALA), or porcine (OSU) rotavirus strains, wild-type murine (EC wt ) rotavirus strain, or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Rotavirus infection in rats was evaluated by (i) clinical findings, (ii) virus antigen shedding or infectious virus titers in the feces or intestinal contents measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay or fluorescent-focus assay, (iii) histopathological changes in the small intestine, (iv) distribution of rotavirus antigen in small-intestine sections by immunofluorescence, and (v) growth rate. Rotavirus infection of 5-day-old but not ≥21-day-old rats resulted in diarrhea that lasted from 1 to 10 days postinoculation. The severity of disease and spread of infection to naÏve littermates differed depending on the virus strain used for inoculation. The duration of virus antigen shedding following infection was considerably prolonged (up to 10 days) in neonatal rats compared to that in 21-day-old rats (1 or 2 days). Based on lack of virus antigen shedding and disease induction, the murine EC wt rotavirus was the only strain tested that did not infect rats. Histopathological changes in the small-intestine mucosa of 5-day-old RRV-inoculated rats but not of PBS-inoculated rats was limited to extensive enterocyte vacuolation in the ileum. In RRV-inoculated neonatal rats, rotavirus antigen was detected in the epithelial cells on the upper half of the intestinal villi of the jejunum and ileum. In addition, infection of neonatal rats with RRV but not with PBS resulted in reduced weight gain. Rats infected with group A rotaviruses provide a new animal model with unique features amenable to investigate rotavirus pathogenesis and the molecular mechanisms of intestinal development, including physiological factors that may regulate age-dependent rotavirus-induced diarrhea.
- Subjects :
- Diarrhea
Rotavirus
Time Factors
viruses
Immunology
Ileum
Biology
medicine.disease_cause
Microbiology
Epithelium
Rotavirus Infections
Jejunum
Pathogenesis
Feces
Virus antigen
Species Specificity
Antigen
Virology
Intestine, Small
medicine
Animals
Antigens, Viral
Body Weight
Age Factors
virus diseases
Small intestine
Rats
Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms
Disease Models, Animal
Enterocytes
medicine.anatomical_structure
Rats, Inbred Lew
Insect Science
Vacuoles
Pathogenesis and Immunity
medicine.symptom
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10985514 and 0022538X
- Volume :
- 76
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Virology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....44d01fb9a99d8ed99317ed17b72c19d2