A Standardized Antiviral Pipeline for Human Norovirus in Human Intestinal Enteroids Demonstrates No Antiviral Activity of Nitazoxanide.

TitleA Standardized Antiviral Pipeline for Human Norovirus in Human Intestinal Enteroids Demonstrates No Antiviral Activity of Nitazoxanide.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsLewis, MA, Cortés-Penfield, NW, Ettayebi, K, Patil, K, Kaur, G, Neill, FH, Atmar, RL, Ramani, S, Estes, MK
JournalbioRxiv
Date Published2023 May 23
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.

DOI10.1101/2023.05.23.542011
Alternate JournalbioRxiv
PubMed ID37293103
PubMed Central IDPMC10245936
Grant ListP01 AI057788 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
T32 GM120011 / GM / NIGMS NIH HHS / United States
U19 AI144297 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States