Serotype Diversity and Reassortment between Human and Animal Rotavirus Strains: Implications for Rotavirus Vaccine Programs
Author(s) -
Jon R. Gentsch,
Ashley R. Laird,
Brittany Bielfelt,
Dixie D. Griffin,
Krisztiàn Bányai,
Madhu Ramachandran,
Vivek Jain,
Nigel A. Cunliffe,
Osamu Nakagomi,
Carl D. Kirkwood,
Thea Kølsen Fischer,
Umesh D. Parashar,
Joseph S. Bresee,
Baoming Jiang,
Roger I. Glass
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the journal of infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.69
H-Index - 252
eISSN - 1537-6613
pISSN - 0022-1899
DOI - 10.1086/431499
Subject(s) - serotype , virology , reassortment , rotavirus vaccine , rotavirus , biology , genotyping , reoviridae , immunity , vaccination , virus , genotype , immunology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , medicine , immune system , genetics , disease , gene , covid-19 , pathology
The development of rotavirus vaccines that are based on heterotypic or serotype-specific immunity has prompted many countries to establish programs to assess the disease burden associated with rotavirus infection and the distribution of rotavirus strains. Strain surveillance helps to determine whether the most prevalent local strains are likely to be covered by the serotype antigens found in current vaccines. After introduction of a vaccine, this surveillance could detect which strains might not be covered by the vaccine. Almost 2 decades ago, studies demonstrated that 4 globally common rotavirus serotypes (G1-G4) represent >90% of the rotavirus strains in circulation. Subsequently, these 4 serotypes were used in the development of reassortant vaccines predicated on serotype-specific immunity. More recently, the application of reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction genotyping, nucleotide sequencing, and antigenic characterization methods has confirmed the importance of the 4 globally common types, but a much greater strain diversity has also been identified (we now recognize strains with at least 42 P-G combinations). These studies also identified globally (G9) or regionally (G5, G8, and P2A[6]) common serotype antigens not covered by the reassortant vaccines that have undergone efficacy trials. The enormous diversity and capacity of human rotaviruses for change suggest that rotavirus vaccines must provide good heterotypic protection to be optimally effective.
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