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Emergence of New Pandemic GII.4 Sydney Norovirus Strain Correlates With Escape From Herd Immunity.

Authors :
Debbink, Kari
Lindesmith, Lisa C.
Donaldson, Eric F.
Costantini, Veronica
Beltramello, Martina
Corti, Davide
Swanstrom, Jesica
Lanzavecchia, Antonio
Vinjé, Jan
Baric, Ralph S.
Source :
Journal of Infectious Diseases. Dec2013, Vol. 208 Issue 11, p1877-1887. 11p.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Background. GII.4 noroviruses are a significant source of acute gastroenteritis worldwide, causing the majority of human norovirus outbreaks. Evolution of the GII.4 major capsid protein occurs rapidly, resulting in the emergence of new strains that produce successive waves of pandemic disease. A new pandemic isolate, GII.4 2012 Sydney, largely replaced previously circulating strains in late 2012. We compare the antigenic properties of GII.4 2012 Sydney with previously circulating strains.Methods. To determine whether GII.4-2012 Sydney is antigenically different from recently circulating strains GII.4-2006 Minerva and GII.4-2009 New Orleans in previously identified blockade epitopes, we compared reactivity and blockade profiles of GII.4-2006, GII.4-2009, and GII.4-2012 virus-like particles in surrogate neutralization/blockade assays using monoclonal antibodies and human polyclonal sera.Results. Using monoclonal antibodies that map to known blockade epitopes in GII.4-2006 and GII.4-2009 and human outbreak polyclonal sera, we demonstrate either complete loss or significantly reduced reactivity and blockade of GII.4.2012 compared to GII.4-2006 and GII.4-2009.Conclusions. GII.4-2012 Sydney is antigenically different from GII.4-2006 Minerva and GII.4-2009 New Orleans in at least 2 key blockade epitopes. Viral evolution in key potential neutralization epitopes likely allowed GII.4-2012 to escape from human herd immunity and emerge as the new predominant strain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221899
Volume :
208
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Infectious Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
91828079
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jit370