Biomedicines (Jul 2021)

Microbiota Depletion Promotes Human Rotavirus Replication in an Adult Mouse Model

  • Roberto Gozalbo-Rovira,
  • Cristina Santiso-Bellón,
  • Javier Buesa,
  • Antonio Rubio-del-Campo,
  • Susana Vila-Vicent,
  • Carlos Muñoz,
  • María J. Yebra,
  • Vicente Monedero,
  • Jesús Rodríguez-Díaz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9070846
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 7
p. 846

Abstract

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Intestinal microbiota-virus-host interaction has emerged as a key factor in mediating enteric virus pathogenicity. With the aim of analyzing whether human gut bacteria improve the inefficient replication of human rotavirus in mice, we performed fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) with healthy infants as donors in antibiotic-treated mice. We showed that a simple antibiotic treatment, irrespective of FMT, resulted in viral shedding for 6 days after challenge with the human rotavirus G1P[8] genotype Wa strain (RVwa). Rotavirus titers in feces were also significantly higher in antibiotic-treated animals with or without FMT but they were decreased in animals subject to self-FMT, where a partial re-establishment of specific bacterial taxons was evidenced. Microbial composition analysis revealed profound changes in the intestinal microbiota of antibiotic-treated animals, whereas some bacterial groups, including members of Lactobacillus, Bilophila, Mucispirillum, and Oscillospira, recovered after self-FMT. In antibiotic-treated and FMT animals where the virus replicated more efficiently, differences were observed in gene expression of immune mediators, such as IL1β and CXCL15, as well as in the fucosyltransferase FUT2, responsible for H-type antigen synthesis in the small intestine. Collectively, our results suggest that antibiotic-induced microbiota depletion eradicates the microbial taxa that restrict human rotavirus infectivity in mice.

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