Affiliation:
1. Laboratoryof Pediatrics, Pediatric Gastroenterology, and Nutrition, Erasmus MC/
Sophia, Rotterdam
2. Research
Laboratory for Infectious Diseases, National Institute for Public
Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, The
Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Rotavirus
is the most important cause of infantile gastroenteritis. Since in vivo
mucosal responses to a rotavirus infection thus far have not been
extensively studied, we related viral replication in the murine small
intestine to alterations in mucosal structure, epithelial cell
homeostasis, cellular kinetics, and differentiation. Seven-day-old
suckling BALB/c mice were inoculated with 2 × 10
4
focus-forming units of murine rotavirus and were compared to
mock-infected controls. Diarrheal illness and viral shedding were
recorded, and small intestinal tissue was evaluated for rotavirus (NSP4
and structural proteins)- and enterocyte-specific (lactase, SGLT1, and
L-FABP) mRNA and protein expression. Morphology, apoptosis,
proliferation, and migration were evaluated (immuno)histochemically.
Diarrhea was observed from days 1 to 5 postinfection, and viral
shedding was observed from days 1 to 10. Two peaks of rotavirus
replication were observed at 1 and 4 days postinfection. Histological
changes were characterized by the accumulation of vacuolated
enterocytes. Strikingly, the number of vacuolated cells exceeded the
number of cells in which viral replication was detectable. Apoptosis
and proliferation were increased from days 1 to 7, resulting in villous
atrophy. Epithelial cell turnover was significantly higher (<4
days) than that observed in controls (7 days). Since epithelial renewal
occurred within 4 days, the second peak of viral replication was most
likely caused by infection of newly synthesized cells. Expression of
enterocyte-specific genes was downregulated in infected cells at mRNA
and protein levels starting as early as 6 h after infection.
In conclusion, we show for the first time that rotavirus infection
induces apoptosis in vivo, an increase in epithelial cell turnover, and
a shutoff of gene expression in enterocytes showing viral replication.
The shutoff of enterocyte-specific gene expression, together with the
loss of mature enterocytes through apoptosis and the replacement of
these cells by less differentiated dividing cells, likely leads to a
defective absorptive function of the intestinal epithelium, which
contributes to rotavirus
pathogenesis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Reference69 articles.
1. Ball, J. M., P. Tian, C. Q. Zeng, A. P. Morris, and M. K. Estes. 1996. Age-dependent diarrhea induced by a rotaviral nonstructural glycoprotein.Science272:101-104.
2. Bell, L. M., H. F. Clark, E. A. O'Brien, M. J. Kornstein, S. A. Plotkin, and P. A. Offit. 1987. Gastroenteritis caused by human rotaviruses (serotype three) in a suckling mouse model. Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med.184:127-132.
3. Bishop, R. F., G. P. Davidson, I. H. Holmes, and B. J. Ruck. 1973. Virus particles in epithelial cells of duodenal mucosa from children with acute non-bacterial gastroenteritis. Lancetii:1281-1283.
4. Degradation of the interferon-induced 68,000-M(r) protein kinase by poliovirus requires RNA
5. Both, G. W., J. S. Mattick, and A. R. Bellamy. 1983. Serotype-specific glycoprotein of simian 11 rotavirus: coding assignment and gene sequence. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA80:3091-3095.
Cited by
126 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献