0000000000886491

AUTHOR

Claudia Istrate

0000-0003-4706-7598

showing 2 related works from this author

Rotavirus stimulates release of serotonin (5-HT) from human enterochromaffin cells and activates brain structures involved in nausea and vomiting

2011

Rotavirus (RV) is the major cause of severe gastroenteritis in young children. A virus-encoded enterotoxin, NSP4 is proposed to play a major role in causing RV diarrhoea but how RV can induce emesis, a hallmark of the illness, remains unresolved. In this study we have addressed the hypothesis that RV-induced secretion of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) by enterochromaffin (EC) cells plays a key role in the emetic reflex during RV infection resulting in activation of vagal afferent nerves connected to nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) and area postrema in the brain stem, structures associated with nausea and vomiting. Our experiments revealed that RV can infect and replicate in human…

RotavirusViral DiseasesViral Nonstructural ProteinsMiceChildlcsh:QH301-705.5Mice Inbred BALB CArea postremaBrainNauseaVagus NerveJejunumInfectious DiseasesMEDICINChild PreschoolEnterochromaffin cellVomitingMedicineSerotonin Antagonistsmedicine.symptomProto-Oncogene Proteins c-fosResearch Articlelcsh:Immunologic diseases. Allergymedicine.medical_specialtySerotoninVomitingImmunologyBiologyMicrobiologyRotavirus InfectionsSDG 3 - Good Health and Well-beingInternal medicineCell Line TumorVirologyGeneticsmedicineEnterochromaffin CellsAnimalsHumansBiologyMolecular BiologyGlycoproteinsToxins BiologicalMEDICINEVagus nerveEndocrinologyGene Expression Regulationlcsh:Biology (General)Cell cultureParasitologyEnteric nervous systemCalciumSerotoninlcsh:RC581-607Ex vivo
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Role of nitric oxide during rotavirus infection.

2006

The pathophysiological mechanisms behind rotavirus-induced diarrhoea still remain incomplete. Current views suggest that the non-structural protein 4 (NSP4) of rotavirus and the enteric nervous system (ENS) participate in water secretion and diarrhoea. In the present work the role of nitric oxide (NO) in rotavirus infection and disease has been studied in vitro, mice and humans. Incubation of human intestinal epithelial cells (HT-29) with purified NSP4 but not with infectious virus produced NO2/NO3 accumulation in the incubation media. The NSP4-induced release of NO metabolites occurred within the first minutes after the addition of the toxin. Mice infected with murine rotavirus (strain EDI…

RotavirusvirusesReoviridaeNitric Oxide Synthase Type IIIleumIn Vitro TechniquesViral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeNitric OxideVirusRotavirus InfectionsMicrobiologyNitric oxideCell LineJejunumchemistry.chemical_compoundMiceVirologyRotavirusmedicineAnimalsHumansProspective StudiesRNA MessengerGlycoproteinsToxins BiologicalMice Inbred BALB CbiologyBase SequenceToxinInfantbiology.organism_classificationVirologyGastroenteritisDiarrheaInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryAnimals NewbornCase-Control StudiesImmunologymedicine.symptomJournal of medical virology
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