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Reoviruses, Rotaviruses and Caliciviruses

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Clinical findings and laboratory diagnosis. Principally a disease of children ... New vaccine has recently been approved. Caliciviruses. Gastroenteritis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reoviruses, Rotaviruses and Caliciviruses


1
Reoviruses, Rotaviruses and Caliciviruses
  • Chapter 37

2
Properties of Reoviruses
  • Structure
  • Icosahedral, 60-80 nm, double capsid shell
  • Segmented, double-stranded RNA 16-27 kb
  • 9 structural proteins, several enzymes packaged
    in virus
  • Nonenveloped
  • Cytoplasmic replication
  • Extremely stable
  • Heat resistant
  • Remain infectious after treatment of pH 3-9
  • Classification
  • Respiratory, enteric, orphan
  • Family Reoviridae
  • Nine genera

3
Reovirus Replication
  • Receptor-mediated attachment and endocytosis
  • Vesicle is targeted to lysosome (fusion)
  • Drop in pH allows virus to shed its outer capsid
  • This results in inner capsid escape into the
    cytoplasm
  • The RNA transcriptase (a polymerase) is activated
  • Inner capsid uncoats, releasing RNAs into
    cytoplasm
  • Viral mRNA synthesis is initiated
  • Viral polypeptides are synthesized
  • A viral replicase synthesizes second RNA strand
  • Assembly occurs in cytoplasm
  • Mature virus exits when cell dies from lysis

4
Rotaviruses
  • Major cause of diarrhea
  • Similar to reoviruses in morphology and
    replication strategy
  • Classification
  • Five serological groups (A-E)
  • Group A can be distinguished from others by
    electophoretic mobility of gene segments
  • Animal susceptibility
  • Rotaviruses are highly promiscuous
  • Major cause of disease in livestock industry
  • Many young animals can become persistent
    carriers, shedding virus to other animals
  • Difficult to propagate in cell culture systems
  • Often requires infection of animals, then
    harvesting virus from diarrhea

5
Rotavirus Gene Segments
6
Rotavirus Pathogenesis
  • Infect villi of small intestine
  • Multiply in enterocytes
  • Distrupts cellular transport systems
  • Endoplasmic reticulum in particular
  • Damaged cells slough off and shed virus
  • Enterocytes are replaced by crypt cells
  • Crypt cells have different sodium and glucose
    transport features that lead to fluid loss in the
    small intestine
  • Diarrhea ensues

7
Rotavirus Pathogenesis
  • Clinical findings and laboratory diagnosis
  • Principally a disease of children
  • Can be fatal if not treated (hydration)
  • Diagnostic by ELISA or PCR
  • Epidemiology and Immunity
  • 3 to 5 billion cases per year
  • As many as 5 million deaths
  • 50 of childhood gastroenteritis are caused by
    rotaviruses
  • IgA controls infection and provides immunity of
    differential durability
  • Treatment and control
  • Treatment is replacement of fluids and
    electrolytes
  • Vaccine licensed in US in 1998 but was withdrawn
    because of bowel obstructions in some children
  • New vaccine has recently been approved

8
Caliciviruses
  • Gastroenteritis
  • Norwalk virus and Norwalk-like viruses
  • Recently infamous for cruise ship infections
  • Extremely difficult to decontaminate
  • Unculturable (propagated in animals)
  • Family Caliciviridae
  • Clinical Findings and Laboratory Diagnosis
  • Diarrhea
  • No defined demographic distribution
  • In the absence of bacterial etiology, such
    diarrheal disease is presumed a calicivirus
  • Diagnosic is by PCR
  • Epidemiology and Immunity
  • Clustered outbreaks
  • Food and water-borne
  • Communicable
  • Immunity is not durable

9
Other Reoviradae Members
  • Orbiviruses
  • Naturally infect insects
  • Can be transmitted to vertebrates
  • Problem in livestock industries
  • Bluetongue virus of sheep
  • African horse sickness
  • Astroviruses
  • Single-stranded plus sense RNA
  • Diarrhea
  • Children and institutionalized elderly
  • Can establish persistent infection in
    immunocompromised
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