Abstract

The potential role of enteric viral infections and the developing infant virome in affecting immune responses to the oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) is unknown. Here we performed viral metagenomic sequencing on 3 serially collected stool samples from 30 Bangladeshi infants following OPV vaccination and compared findings to stool samples from 16 age-matched infants in the United States (US). In 14 Bangladeshi infants, available post-vaccination serum samples were tested for polio-neutralizing antibodies. The abundance (p = 0.006) and richness (p = 0.013) of the eukaryotic virome increased with age and were higher than seen in age-matched US infants (p < 0.001). In contrast, phage diversity metrics remained stable and were similar to those in US infants. Non-poliovirus eukaryotic virus abundance (3.68 log10 vs. 2.25 log10, p = 0.002), particularly from potential viral pathogens (2.78log10 vs. 0.83log10, p = 0.002), and richness (p = 0.016) were inversely associated with poliovirus shedding. Following vaccination, 28.6% of 14 infants tested developed neutralizing antibodies to all three Sabin types and also exhibited higher rates of poliovirus shedding (p = 0.020). No vaccine-derived poliovirus variants were detected. These results reveal an inverse association between eukaryotic virome abundance and poliovirus shedding. Overall gut virome ecology and concurrent viral infections may impact oral vaccine responsiveness in Bangladeshi infants.

Highlights

  • Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of California, 185 Berry Street, Box #0134, San Francisco, CA 94107, USA. 9These authors contributed : Susanna K

  • Consistent with prevailing h­ ypotheses[2,29,30], we found that shedding of enteric viral pathogens is associated with decreased poliovirus shedding

  • Bangladeshi infants with decreased or no shedding of poliovirus following vaccination exhibited a higher abundance of eukaryotic viruses overall, viruses that are known causes of gastrointestinal or respiratory illness, than infants with higher rates of shedding

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We applied metagenomic virus sequencing to characterize the gastrointestinal virome in serially collected stool samples from infants from Bangladesh. All of the infants evaluated in this study completed the first two OPV vaccinations (out of 3 for the full series), with the first dose administered within the first 4 months of life. OPV consists of trivalent live-attenuated Sabin poliovirus that replicates at mucosal sites in the infant gastrointestinal tract and induces mucosal and systemic antibody ­production[1]. We describe the infant virome in Bangladesh in comparison to that of US children and investigate the role of the virome on shedding of vaccine-associated poliovirus and the development of effective poliovirus neutralizing antibody responses

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call