Abstract
Rotaviruses replicate in mature, villous epithelial cells of the mammalian small intestine. Although rotavirus has not been detected in plasma of infants with rotavirus-induced gastroenteritis, rotavirus particles and rotavirus genomic RNA have been detected in extraintestinal sites (e.g. cerebrospinal fluid). Using a murine rotavirus strain well adapted to growth in the small intestines of suckling mice, we found that macrophages (and to a lesser extent B cells) in gut-associated lymphoid tissue contained rotavirus-specific proteins, and that these antigen-containing cells travelled to sites distant to the intestine.
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