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Human Astrovirus 1–8 Seroprevalence Evaluation in a United States Adult Population

Lena Meyer, Kevin Delgado-Cunningham, Nicholas Lorig‐Roach, Jordan Ford, Rebecca M. DuBois

2021Viruses22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Human astroviruses are an important cause of viral gastroenteritis globally, yet few studies have investigated the serostatus of adults to establish rates of previous infection. Here, we applied biolayer interferometry immunosorbent assay (BLI-ISA), a recently developed serosurveillance technique, to measure the presence of blood plasma IgG antibodies directed towards the human astrovirus capsid spikes from serotypes 1-8 in a cross-sectional sample of a United States adult population. The seroprevalence rates of IgG antibodies were 73% for human astrovirus serotype 1, 62% for serotype 3, 52% for serotype 4, 29% for serotype 5, 27% for serotype 8, 22% for serotype 2, 8% for serotype 6, and 8% for serotype 7. Notably, seroprevalence rates for capsid spike antigens correlate with neutralizing antibody rates determined previously. This work is the first seroprevalence study evaluating all eight classical human astrovirus serotypes.

Topics & Concepts

SerotypeSeroprevalenceAstrovirusVirologySerostatusBiologyAntibodyPopulationSerologyVirusMedicineImmunologyRotavirusEnvironmental healthViral loadViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyVirus-based gene therapy researchAnimal Virus Infections Studies
Human Astrovirus 1–8 Seroprevalence Evaluation in a United States Adult Population | Litcius