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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, Jan 1994, 89-94, Vol 1, No. 1
CF Arias, S Lopez, JD Mascarenhas, P Romero, P Cano, YB Gabbay, RB de Freitas and AC Linhares
We have characterized the neutralizing antibody immune response to six
human rotavirus serotypes (G1 to G4, G8, and G9) in Brazilian children with
primary and secondary rotavirus infections and correlated the response with
the G serotype of the infecting rotavirus strain. Twenty- five children
were studied: 17 had a single rotavirus infection, 4 were reinfected once,
and 4 experienced three infections. Two of the reinfections were by
non-group A rotaviruses. Among the 25 primary infections, we observed
homotypic as well as heterotypic responses; the serotype G1 viruses, which
accounted for 13 of these infections, induced mostly a homotypic response,
while infections by serotype G2 and G4 viruses induced, in addition to the
homotypic, a heterotypic response directed primarily to serotype G1. Two of
the primary infections induced heterotypic antibodies to 69M, a serotype G8
virus that by RNA electrophoresis analysis was found not to circulate in
the population during the time of the study. The specificity of the
neutralizing antibody immune response induced by a virus of a given
serotype was the same in primary as well as secondary infections. These
results indicate that the heterotypic immune response induced in a primary
rotavirus infection is an intrinsic property of the virus strain, and
although there seem to be general patterns of serotype- specific
seroconversion, these may vary from serotype to serotype and from strain to
strain within a serotype.
Copyright © 1994 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Neutralizing antibody immune response in children with primary and secondary rotavirus infections
Departamento de Biologia Molecular, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Cuernavaca, Mexico.
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