Determinants of rotavirus host range restriction--a heterologous bovine NSP1 gene does not affect replication kinetics in the pig

Virology. 1998 May 25;245(1):47-52. doi: 10.1006/viro.1998.9108.

Abstract

The genetic basis of rotavirus host range restriction (host species specificity) is unknown but the NSP1 (fifth) gene has been implicated in some studies. We studied the replication kinetics in vivo of a NSP1 gene monoreassortant, E11, to assess the influence of a heterologous NSP1 gene on the ability to replicate in pigs. The monoreassortant possessed 10 genes from the porcine parent rotavirus SW20/21, which replicated productively in pigs, and the NSP1 gene from the bovine rotavirus UK which produced an abortive infection in pigs. Groups of up to four pigs were inoculated orally with 10(5) to 10(6) TCID50 of the monoreassortant, the porcine parent rotavirus, or the bovine parent rotavirus or were sham inoculated. The monoreassortant replicated productively in pigs with replication kinetics almost identical to the porcine parent rotavirus. During a 9-day observation period after inoculation, the number of days with virus in the faeces, the onset and duration of virus excretion, and peak titres in faeces were similar for the monoreassortant and the parent porcine rotavirus. The genetic composition of the viruses excreted in the faeces was confirmed as that of the inocula by PAGE. Thus possession of a heterologous NSP1 gene from a bovine rotavirus which failed to replicate in pigs did not produce an abortive infection or affect the replication kinetics in vivo. The genetic basis of host range restriction between porcine and bovine rotaviruses remains to be established.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cattle
  • Reassortant Viruses / physiology*
  • Rotavirus / physiology*
  • Species Specificity
  • Swine
  • Viral Nonstructural Proteins / genetics*
  • Virus Replication / genetics*

Substances

  • Viral Nonstructural Proteins
  • nsp1 protein, Rotavirus