In Vitro Cell Culture Infectivity Assay for Human Noroviruses

Timothy M. Straub(Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Kerstin Höner zu Bentrup(Tulane University), Patricia Orosz Coghlan(University of Arizona), Alice Dohnálková(Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Brooke K. Mayer(Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Rachel Bartholomew(Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Catherine O. Valdez(Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Cynthia J. Bruckner-Lea(Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), Charles P. Gerba(University of Arizona), Morteza Abbaszadegan(Arizona State University), Cheryl A. Nickerson(Tulane University)
Emerging infectious diseases
March 1, 2007
Cited by 306Open Access
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Abstract

Human noroviruses cause severe, self-limiting gastroenteritis that typically lasts 24-48 hours. Because of the lack of suitable tissue culture or animal models, the true nature of norovirus pathogenesis remains unknown. We show, for the first time, that noroviruses can infect and replicate in a physiologically relevant 3-dimensional (3-D), organoid model of human small intestinal epithelium. This level of cellular differentiation was achieved by growing the cells on porous collagen-I coated microcarrier beads under conditions of physiological fluid shear in rotating wall vessel bioreactors. Microscopy, PCR, and fluorescent in situ hybridization provided evidence of norovirus infection. Cytopathic effect and norovirus RNA were detected at each of the 5 cell passages for genogroup I and II viruses. Our results demonstrate that the highly differentiated 3-D cell culture model can support the natural growth of human noroviruses, whereas previous attempts that used differentiated monolayer cultures failed.


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