Authors
Karin Bok, Gabriel I Parra, Tanaji Mitra, Eugenio Abente, Charlene K Shaver, Denali Boon, Ronald Engle, Claro Yu, Albert Z Kapikian, Stanislav V Sosnovtsev, Robert H Purcell, Kim Y Green
Publication date
2011/1/4
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
108
Issue
1
Pages
325-330
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Noroviruses are global agents of acute gastroenteritis, but the development of control strategies has been hampered by the absence of a robust animal model. Studies in chimpanzees have played a key role in the characterization of several fastidious hepatitis viruses, and we investigated the feasibility of such studies for the noroviruses. Seronegative chimpanzees inoculated i.v. with the human norovirus strain Norwalk virus (NV) did not show clinical signs of gastroenteritis, but the onset and duration of virus shedding in stool and serum antibody responses were similar to that observed in humans. NV RNA was detected in intestinal and liver biopsies concurrent with the detection of viral shedding in stool, and NV antigen expression was observed in cells of the small intestinal lamina propria. Two infected chimpanzees rechallenged 4, 10, or 24 mo later with NV were resistant to reinfection, and the presence of NV …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
K Bok, GI Parra, T Mitra, E Abente, CK Shaver, D Boon… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011