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Infection of calves with bovine norovirus Glll.1 strain jena virus: an experimental model to study the pathogenesis of norovirus infection

Infection of calves with bovine norovirus Glll.1 strain jena virus: an experimental model to study the pathogenesis of norovirus infection
Infection of calves with bovine norovirus Glll.1 strain jena virus: an experimental model to study the pathogenesis of norovirus infection
The experimental infection of newborn calves with bovine norovirus was used as a homologous large animal model to study the pathogenesis of norovirus infection and to determine target cells for viral replication. Six newborn calves were inoculated orally with Jena virus (JV), a bovine norovirus GIII.1 strain, and six calves served as mock-inoculated controls. Following infection, calves were euthanized before the onset of diarrhea (12 h postinoculation [hpi]), shortly after the onset of diarrhea (18 to 21 hpi), and postconvalescence (4 days pi [dpi]). Calves inoculated with JV developed severe watery diarrhea at 14 to 16 hpi, and this symptom lasted for 53.5 to 67.0 h. Intestinal lesions were characterized by severe villus atrophy together with loss and attenuation of villus epithelium. Viral capsid antigen (JV antigen) was detected by immunohistochemistry in the cytoplasm of epithelial cells on villi. In addition, granular material positive for JV antigen was detected in the lamina propria of villi. Lesions first appeared at 12 hpi and were most extensive at 18 to 19 hpi, extending from midjejunum to ileum. The intestinal mucosa had completely recovered at 4 dpi. There was no indication of systemic infection as described for norovirus infection in mice. JV was found in intestinal contents by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) as early as 12 hpi. Fecal shedding of the virus started at 13 hpi and stopped at 23 hpi or at necropsy (4 dpi), respectively. Throughout the trial, none of the control calves tested positive for JV by ELISA or RT-PCR.
0022-538X
12013-12021
Otto, Peter H.
73c03c6b-474a-4e43-832c-6791c0833dae
Clarke, Ian N.
ff6c9324-3547-4039-bb2c-10c0b3327a8b
Lambden, Paul R.
4fcd536e-2d9a-4366-97c6-386e6b005698
Salim, Omar
a8a00604-9e57-4638-8c96-5b37e75fee90
Reetz, Jochen
8f39a0f2-a07e-4434-9acb-5ce55c38068c
Liebler-Tenorio, Elisabeth M.
3e99ebbb-b019-4d17-bac9-647844034fca
Otto, Peter H.
73c03c6b-474a-4e43-832c-6791c0833dae
Clarke, Ian N.
ff6c9324-3547-4039-bb2c-10c0b3327a8b
Lambden, Paul R.
4fcd536e-2d9a-4366-97c6-386e6b005698
Salim, Omar
a8a00604-9e57-4638-8c96-5b37e75fee90
Reetz, Jochen
8f39a0f2-a07e-4434-9acb-5ce55c38068c
Liebler-Tenorio, Elisabeth M.
3e99ebbb-b019-4d17-bac9-647844034fca

Otto, Peter H., Clarke, Ian N., Lambden, Paul R., Salim, Omar, Reetz, Jochen and Liebler-Tenorio, Elisabeth M. (2011) Infection of calves with bovine norovirus Glll.1 strain jena virus: an experimental model to study the pathogenesis of norovirus infection. Journal of Virology, 85 (22), 12013-12021. (doi:10.1128/JVI.05342-11). (PMID:21880760)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The experimental infection of newborn calves with bovine norovirus was used as a homologous large animal model to study the pathogenesis of norovirus infection and to determine target cells for viral replication. Six newborn calves were inoculated orally with Jena virus (JV), a bovine norovirus GIII.1 strain, and six calves served as mock-inoculated controls. Following infection, calves were euthanized before the onset of diarrhea (12 h postinoculation [hpi]), shortly after the onset of diarrhea (18 to 21 hpi), and postconvalescence (4 days pi [dpi]). Calves inoculated with JV developed severe watery diarrhea at 14 to 16 hpi, and this symptom lasted for 53.5 to 67.0 h. Intestinal lesions were characterized by severe villus atrophy together with loss and attenuation of villus epithelium. Viral capsid antigen (JV antigen) was detected by immunohistochemistry in the cytoplasm of epithelial cells on villi. In addition, granular material positive for JV antigen was detected in the lamina propria of villi. Lesions first appeared at 12 hpi and were most extensive at 18 to 19 hpi, extending from midjejunum to ileum. The intestinal mucosa had completely recovered at 4 dpi. There was no indication of systemic infection as described for norovirus infection in mice. JV was found in intestinal contents by reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) as early as 12 hpi. Fecal shedding of the virus started at 13 hpi and stopped at 23 hpi or at necropsy (4 dpi), respectively. Throughout the trial, none of the control calves tested positive for JV by ELISA or RT-PCR.

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Published date: November 2011
Organisations: Clinical & Experimental Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 202095
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/202095
ISSN: 0022-538X
PURE UUID: 6f279636-f771-402c-9549-ede422e4242b
ORCID for Ian N. Clarke: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4938-1620
ORCID for Omar Salim: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2562-4827

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Date deposited: 03 Nov 2011 12:50
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:07

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Contributors

Author: Peter H. Otto
Author: Ian N. Clarke ORCID iD
Author: Paul R. Lambden
Author: Omar Salim ORCID iD
Author: Jochen Reetz
Author: Elisabeth M. Liebler-Tenorio

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