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Intracellular neutralisation of rotavirus by VP6-specific IgG.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Vaysburd, Marina 
Wing, Mark 
Foss, Stian 
Andersen, Jan Terje 

Abstract

Rotavirus is a major cause of gastroenteritis in children, with infection typically inducing high levels of protective antibodies. Antibodies targeting the middle capsid protein VP6 are particularly abundant, and as VP6 is only exposed inside cells, neutralisation must be post-entry. However, while a system of poly immune globulin receptor (pIgR) transcytosis has been proposed for anti-VP6 IgAs, the mechanism by which VP6-specific IgG mediates protection remains less clear. We have developed an intracellular neutralisation assay to examine how antibodies neutralise rotavirus inside cells, enabling comparison between IgG and IgA isotypes. Unexpectedly we found that neutralisation by VP6-specific IgG was much more efficient than by VP6-specific IgA. This observation was highly dependent on the activity of the cytosolic antibody receptor TRIM21 and was confirmed using an in vivo model of murine rotavirus infection. Furthermore, mice deficient in only IgG and not other antibody isotypes had a serious deficit in intracellular antibody-mediated protection. The finding that VP6-specific IgG protect mice against rotavirus infection has important implications for rotavirus vaccination. Current assays determine protection in humans predominantly by measuring rotavirus-specific IgA titres. Measurements of VP6-specific IgG may add to existing mechanistic correlates of protection.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Antibodies, Viral, Antigens, Viral, Capsid Proteins, Humans, Immunoglobulin G, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Rotavirus, Rotavirus Infections, Species Specificity

Journal Title

PLoS Pathog

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1553-7366
1553-7374

Volume Title

16

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (211138/Z/18/Z)