By age five, 1 in 6 U.S. children have had a case of medically attended norovirus acute gastroenteritis (AGE). Norovirus is the leading cause of U.S. pediatric AGE, with reported cases rising 52% in 2012 due to the emergence of a novel strain. The purpose of this study is to determine the contribution of the FUT2 (secretor) gene to the population burden of pediatric AGE, particularly norovirus-associated AGE. The FUT2 gene enzyme controls the production of certain sugars at the gut surface, and is hypothesized to be involved in AGE pathogen susceptibility by modifying the surface where AGE pathogens first interact with the host. Noroviruses in particular bind to the sugars synthesized by FUT2 gene enzymes. Nearly 25% of the U.S. population lacks a functional FUT2 gene; these individuals are known as "non- secretors." Several challenge studies and outbreak investigations have shown that non-secretors are resistant to infection by certain strains of noroviruses. However, this association does not hold for all strains, and no studies to date have explored the impact of this genetic variant on population-wide patterns of norovirus AGE. Additionally, few studies have explored the extent to which non-secretors may still shed the virus- thus potentially infecting others- even if they are protected from symptomatic infection by certain strains. The proposed research tests the central hypothesis that secretor genetics determines the population risk of norovirus symptomatic infection and asymptomatic shedding as well as overall AGE susceptibility. For this study, active AGE surveillance was conducted at six pediatric institutions
across the country in affiliation with the New Vaccine Surveillance Network (NVSN) of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Stool (for pathogen testing) and saliva (for DNA genotyping) were collected from 1505 AGE cases and 827 healthy control children under the age of five from December 2011- November 2012. Projections based on preliminary analyses show that at least 300 of these cases will be norovirus positive, including a significant number of cases infected by the 2012 emerging norovirus strain. The proposed research has two specific aims: (1) Determine the association between FUT2 (secretor) genotype and risk of pediatric AGE detected through a national surveillance network and (2) Compare asymptomatic shedding of norovirus in secretors vs. non-secretors. This work has direct
Fut2 Genotype Impact On National Burden of Norovirus Infections
Objective
Investigators
Curran, Rebecca Lynn Currier
Institution
University of Cincinnati
Start date
2014
End date
2016
Funding Source
Project number
5F30AI109893-02
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