PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Protective effects and immunomodulation on piglets infected with rotavirus following resveratrol supplementation.

  • Qiankun Cui,
  • Qiuting Fu,
  • Xinghong Zhao,
  • Xu Song,
  • Jiankang Yu,
  • Yi Yang,
  • Kai Sun,
  • Lu Bai,
  • Ye Tian,
  • Shufan Chen,
  • Renyong Jia,
  • Yuanfeng Zou,
  • Lixia Li,
  • Xiaoxia Liang,
  • Changliang He,
  • Lizi Yin,
  • Gang Ye,
  • Cheng Lv,
  • Guizhou Yue,
  • Zhongqiong Yin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0192692
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
p. e0192692

Abstract

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Rotavirus (RV), belonging to Reoviridae family, is the leading cause of acute severe viral diarrhea in children (under 5 years old) and infant animals worldwide. Although vaccines are commonly used to prevent infection, episodes of diarrhea caused by RV frequently occur. Thus, this study was conducted to determine whether resveratrol had protective effects against RV infection in piglets. Following pretreatment with resveratrol dry suspension through adding into the basal diet for 3 weeks, the piglets were orally challenged with RV. We found that resveratrol could alleviate diarrhea induced by RV infection. Resveratrol-treatment inhibited the TNF-α production, indicating that the anti-RV activity of resveratrol may be achieved by reducing the inflammatory response. The IFN-γ level was elevated in 10mg/kg/d resveratrol-treated group and 30mg/kg/d resveratrol-treated group after RV infection. The ratios of CD4+/CD8+ in resveratrol-treated groups were the same as that in mock infected group, suggesting that resveratrol could maintain the immune function in RV-infected piglets. It was found that resveratrol could alleviate diarrhea induced by RV infection. These results revealed that resveratrol dry suspension could be a new control measure for RV infection.