Title | A Standardized Antiviral Pipeline for Human Norovirus in Human Intestinal Enteroids Demonstrates No Antiviral Activity of Nitazoxanide. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2023 |
Authors | Lewis, MA, Cortés-Penfield, NW, Ettayebi, K, Patil, K, Kaur, G, Neill, FH, Atmar, RL, Ramani, S, Estes, MK |
Journal | bioRxiv |
Date Published | 2023 May 23 |
ISSN | 2692-8205 |
Abstract | Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) are the leading cause of acute gastroenteritis. In immunocompetent hosts, symptoms usually resolve within three days; however, in immunocompromised persons, HuNoV infection can become persistent, debilitating, and sometimes life-threatening. There are no licensed therapeutics for HuNoV due to a near half-century delay in its cultivation. Treatment for chronic HuNoV infection in immunosuppressed patients anecdotally includes nitazoxanide, a broad-spectrum antimicrobial licensed for treatment of parasite-induced gastroenteritis. Despite its off-label use for chronic HuNoV infection, nitazoxanide has not been clearly demonstrated to be an effective treatment. In this study, we established a standardized pipeline for antiviral testing using multiple human small intestinal enteroid (HIE) lines representing different intestinal segments and evaluated whether nitazoxanide inhibits replication of 5 HuNoV strains . Nitazoxanide did not exhibit high selective antiviral activity against any HuNoV strains tested, indicating it is not an effective antiviral for norovirus infection. HIEs are further demonstrated as a model to serve as a pre-clinical platform to test antivirals against human noroviruses to treat gastrointestinal disease. |
DOI | 10.1101/2023.05.23.542011 |
Alternate Journal | bioRxiv |
PubMed ID | 37293103 |
PubMed Central ID | PMC10245936 |
Grant List | P01 AI057788 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States T32 GM120011 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States T32 GM139801 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States U19 AI144297 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States |