Animals as Reservoir for Human Norovirus
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Search Output:
2.2. Noroviruses in Domesticated and Wild Animals
2.3. Is There Evidence for Cross Species Transmission?
2.3.1. Animal-to-Human Transmission
2.3.2. Human-to-Animal Transmission
2.3.3. Susceptibility of Animals to Human Norovirus Strains
3. Discussion and Conclusions
4. Methods
4.1. Search Strategy
4.1.1. embase.com (2903)
4.1.2. Medline Ovid (1550)
4.1.3. Web of Science (2049)
4.1.4. Google Scholar (200)
4.2. Selection Criteria
4.3. Data Extraction
- General description.Location (country, district, city), duration of study, date of study, species and number of tested animals and age of animals.For studies describing experimental infections of animals with human or animal noroviruses, the following information was collected if described in the paper:
- Details on experimental infection methods.Regarding the experimental infection, the route of inoculation was documented since this may affect which subclasses of immunoglobulins are induced. In addition, genogroup/genotype of the virus inoculate, as well as amount used (number of genome copies) and the sample type collected (e.g., saliva, feces, sera) were registered. It was further recorded how virus replication was confirmed, which methods was used to detect virus (RT-PCR, real-time RT-PCR, antigen capturing ELISA, EM), how much was detected and at what time points.
- Details on clinical picture; description of the health state of the animals; which symptoms (e.g., diarrhea, vomiting), as well as the duration of symptoms.
- Pathology; pathological examination results.
- Immunohistochemistry data was extracted to for information regarding the organ and cell tropism.
- Host response was assessed by collecting serological data including method of antibody detection, type of immunoglobulins (Igs) tested (IgM, IgG, IgA), origin of Igs (saliva, sera, feces), the time period Igs were detected and if available whether they were blocking virus from binding to HBGAs. Since some animal noroviruses cluster close to human norovirus, information about cross-reactivity was also collected. Host factors such as HBGA, secretor and non-secretor status were of interest, since they are known to be important for susceptibility in humans, while in animals this link is less evident.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgements
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Location | Host | Genotype | Prevalence in % (References) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Serology | Feces | ||||
The Americas | USA | Pigs | GII.18, GII.11, GII.19 | 71 [46] | 0–19 [25,28,46,48] |
Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 100 [49] | 29–72 [50,51,52] | ||
Cats | GIV.2 | 17–43 [53,54] | |||
Sea lion | GII/GIV | 9 [55] | |||
Canada | Pigs | GII, GII.11, GII.18 | 2–85 [30,31,32] | ||
Cattle | GIII.2 | 1 [30] | |||
Venezuela | Pigs | all | 0 [39] | ||
Cattle | GIII | 0.7 [56] | |||
Argentina | Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 3 [57] | ||
Brazil | Pigs | GII.11, GII.18, GII.19 | 0–52 [44,58,59,60,61] | ||
Cats | GIV,2 | 3 [62] | |||
Asia/New Zealand | China | Pigs | GII.11, GII.18, GII.19 | 0–17 [26,27,33,35] | |
Cattle | GIII.1 | 11 [63] | |||
Bats | NA | 3–4 [6,64] | |||
Taiwan | Pigs | GII.11 | 1.6 [34] | ||
Japan | Pigs | GII.11 | 36 [46] | 0.4–15 [10,36,45] | |
Dogs | GIV | 2 [65] | |||
Cats | GIV.2 | 1.2 [65] | |||
Rodents | GV | 0–14 [66] | |||
Korea | Pigs | GII.11, GII.18 | 0.5–2 [37,67] | ||
Dogs | Canine norovirus | 16 [68] | 3 [68] | ||
Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 9 [69] | |||
Iran | Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 18–40 [70,71] | ||
Turkey | Cattle | GIII.2 | 4–9 [72,73] | ||
India | Cattle | GIII.1 | 0.4 [74] | ||
New Zealand | Pigs | GII.11 | 9 [38] | ||
Cattle | GIII.1 | 54 [75] | |||
Sheep | GIII.3 | 24 [38] | |||
Europe | Italy | Pigs | GII.11 | 0–0.5 [76,77] | |
Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 11–21 [78,79] | |||
Dogs | GIV, GVI | 5–60 [47,80,81] | 2–5 [82,83] | ||
Lion | GIV.2 | 100 [84] | |||
Cats | GIV.2 | 16 [85] | 3 [81] | ||
Spain | Pigs | all | 12 [86] | ||
Dogs | GVI | 8 [83] | |||
Portugal | Dogs | GIV, GVI | 64 [47] | 23–28 [87,88,89] | |
Greece | Dogs | GIV.2 | 8 [90] | ||
France | Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 20–37 [91,92] | ||
Dogs | GVI.2 | 20 [47,83] | 0 [83] | ||
Switzerland | Dogs | GVI.2 | 20 [47] | ||
Germany | Pigs | GII.18 | 14 [41] | ||
Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 66–99 [93,94] | 93 [95] | ||
Dogs | GIV, GVI.2 | 16 [47] | 4 [83] | ||
Rodents | GV | 10 [96] | |||
Netherlands | Pigs | GII.11 | 2 [9] | ||
Cattle | GIII.2 | 0–44 [9] | 4 [97] | ||
Dogs | GVI.2 | 34 [47] | |||
Porpoise | not classified yet | 24 [98] | 10 [98] | ||
Belgium | Pigs | GII.19 | 4.6 [99] | ||
Cattle | GIII.2 | 93 [100] | 4–9 [80,100,101,102] | ||
UK | Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 66–98 [93,103] | 11 [104] | |
Dogs | GIV, GVI, GVII | 45–48 [47,105,106] | 0 [106] | ||
Rodents | GV | 22–67 [107] | |||
Ireland | Pigs | none | 0 [40] | ||
Dogs | none | 0 [47] | |||
Denmark | Dogs | GVI.2 | 20 [47] | ||
Rodents | none | 0 [108] | |||
Sweden | Dogs | GVI.2 | 40 [47] | ||
Norway | Cattle | GIII.1, GIII.2 | 50 [109] | ||
Dogs | GVI.2 | 32 [47] | |||
Finland | Dogs | GVI.2 | 70 [47] | 0 [110] | |
Rodents | none | 0 [111] | |||
Poland | Dogs | GIV.2 | 32 [47] | ||
Slovenia | Pigs | GII.11, GII.18 | 1.2 [42] | ||
Cattle | GIII.2 | 2 [42] | |||
Hungary | Pigs | GII.11 | 6 [112] | ||
Dogs | GVI | 0 [47] | 3 [113] | ||
Rodents | GV | 24–67 [114] | |||
Africa | Egypt | Cattle | GIII.2 | 24 [115] | |
Tunisia | Cattle | GIII.2 | 17 [116] | ||
South Africa | Pigs | none | 0 [117] | ||
Ethiopia | Pigs | GII.1 | 0 [43] |
Gnotobiotic Calf [123] | Gnotobiotic Pig [151,152,153,154,155,156,157,158,159,160] | Mini Piglet [145] | Rhesus Macaque [136,142,161] | Pigtail Macaque [162] | Chimpanzee [163,164] | Balb/c RAG/γc−/− Mouse [144] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Virus | GII.4 | GII.4, GII.12 | GII.3 | GI.1, GII.2, GII.4, GII.17 | GII.3 | GI.1 | GII.4 |
Inoculation (route and virus quantity) | Oral 1.62 × 107 genomes | Oral/intranasal 104–1010 genomes | Intragastric 107 genomes | Oral/intragastric 105–106 genomes | Nasogastric, Quantity not clear | Intravenous/intragastric 4 × 106–4 × 108 genomes | Intraperitoneal 4 × 103–7 × 104 genomes |
Shedding | 3 days | 2–16 days | 7 days | 1–19 days | Up to 21 days | 2 days–17 weeks | No shedding 1 |
Seroconversion | Yes | Yes | NA | Yes/no 2 | Yes | Yes | No |
Pathology | Lesions, mild villous atrophy, enterocyte vacuolization in small intestine | Increase in inflammatory cells in LM, necrosis, shortening of villous tips | No damage | No damage | NA | No damage | No damage |
Tropism (detection of viral antigen or genome) | Positive enterocytes in the ileum, cells in LM | Enterocytes and cells in LM of duodenum, jejunum, ileum. Spleen and MLN | Immune cells in the small/large intestine, tonsils, spleen, lymph nodes, MLN | NA | NA | Cells in LM of duodenum and jejunum | Macrophage-like cells in liver and spleen. Viral genomes detected in various tissue 3 |
Disease | Diarrhea | Diarrhea | Diarrhea | Asymptomatic | Diarrhea | Asymptomatic | Asymptomatic |
Viremia | Yes (low) | Yes | Yes | NA | NA | NA | NA |
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Villabruna, N.; Koopmans, M.P.G.; de Graaf, M. Animals as Reservoir for Human Norovirus. Viruses 2019, 11, 478. https://doi.org/10.3390/v11050478
Villabruna N, Koopmans MPG, de Graaf M. Animals as Reservoir for Human Norovirus. Viruses. 2019; 11(5):478. https://doi.org/10.3390/v11050478
Chicago/Turabian StyleVillabruna, Nele, Marion P. G. Koopmans, and Miranda de Graaf. 2019. "Animals as Reservoir for Human Norovirus" Viruses 11, no. 5: 478. https://doi.org/10.3390/v11050478