Abstract

The role of gut microbiota [especially, histo-blood group antigen (HBGA)-expressing bacteria] in influencing human norovirus (HuNoV) infections is unclear. We investigated if infectivity of GII.12 HuNoV in gnotobiotic (Gn) pigs is altered by intestinal colonization with Escherichia fergusonii known to express HBGA A and H on their cell surface. Fifteen piglets were randomly grouped: (1) E. fergusonii + HuNoV (n = 6), (2) HuNoV alone (n = 6), and (3) Mock-inoculated (n = 3). Pigs (8-11-day-old) were inoculated orally with GII.12 HuNoV strain HS206 (9.5 log10 genomic equivalents/pig) or mock. For 2 days prior to viral inoculation, pigs were inoculated orally with E. fergusonii [8 log10 colony forming units/pig/day]. Daily fecal consistency, fecal viral RNA or E. fergusonii shedding, and histopathology (at euthanasia) were evaluated. Unlike the reduced infectivity of GII.4 HuNoV observed previously in Gn pigs colonized with Enterobacter cloacae known to express HBGA A, B, and H on the surface, E. fergusonii + HuNoV pigs exhibited significantly higher cumulative fecal HuNoV RNA shedding at PIDs 6–14 and 1–21 compared with HuNoV alone pigs. Mean days of fecal HuNoV RNA shedding were also significantly greater in E. fergusonii + HuNoV pigs (11.8 ± 1.6 days) compared with HuNoV alone pigs (7.0 ± 1.0 days). By immunofluorescent staining, HuNoV antigen-positive bacteria were detected on the surface of the intestinal epithelium, possibly enhancing attachment of HuNoV to enterocytes, suggesting a potential mechanism by which intestinal colonization with E. fergusonii promoted infectivity of GII.12 HuNoV in Gn pigs.

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