Skip to main content
About the Institute
  • English
  • Français
  • Español
  • Russian
  • Portuguese

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Pediatrics
  3. The microbiota as a barrier against rotavirus
  • Our publications
    • News
    • Microbiota Mag
    • Thematic pages
    • Experts' point of view
    • Thematic folders
    • Overviews - Microbiota Magazine
  • About the Institute
    • About us
    • International Microbiota Observatory
    • Press room
    • Partnerships
  • Congresses
    • Congress calendar
    • Congress reviews
  • Continuing Medical Education
    • Accrediting courses
  • Useful documents
    • How to talk about
    • Infographics
    • IBS Diagnosis Check List
    • Patients Stories

    Join the microbiota community

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    • Instagram
    • Bluesky

Lay public section

Find here your dedicated section
Gastroenterology
Gynecology
Pediatrics
General Medicine

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Pediatrics
  3. The microbiota as a barrier against rotavirus
Pediatrics

The microbiota as a barrier against rotavirus

Diarrhea
Pediatrics Gastroenterology

A segmented filamentous bacterium found in the microbiota of some mice gives them the ability to resist rotavirus-induced infections. A more frequent renewal of the intestinal epithelium could explain this barrier effect.

Gastroenterology
Gynecology
Pediatrics
General Medicine
  • Our publications
    • News
    • Microbiota Mag
    • Thematic pages
    • Experts' point of view
    • Thematic folders
    • Overviews - Microbiota Magazine
  • About the Institute
    • About us
    • International Microbiota Observatory
    • Press room
    • Partnerships
  • Congresses
    • Congress calendar
    • Congress reviews
  • Continuing Medical Education
    • Accrediting courses
  • Useful documents
    • How to talk about
    • Infographics
    • IBS Diagnosis Check List
    • Patients Stories

    Join the microbiota community

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    • Instagram
    • Bluesky

Lay public section

Find here your dedicated section

Sources

This article is based on scientific information

Sharing is caring

Your colleagues might be interested in this topic. Why not share it?

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Mail
Photo : The microbiota as a barrier against rotavirus

About this article

Created 28 January 2020
Updated 15 July 2024

 

When a virus enters the digestive tract and is about to infect intestinal cells, it is not alone: billions of bacteria from the microbiota are also there and can modulate its infectious potential. Scientists arrived at this conclusion accidentally while working on Rag1-KO mice, a model of immunodeficient mice with chronic rotavirus infection (RV).

The microbiota as a barrier against rotavirus

These researchers non-intentionally observed the birth of a line of RV-resistant mice, which they called (sidenote: GSU stands for Georgia State University, where these mice were born ) . They then tried to understand the origin of this resistant phenotype. When Rag1-KO mice were fed the feces of GSU mice, they became resistant to RV, thus proving the role of the microbiota of GSU mice.

A segmented filamentous bacterium is involved

A series of discriminating treatments (heat, filtrations, several antimicrobial agents) complemented by an analysis of the microbiome of GSU mice indicated the specific presence of Candidatus arthromitus species, which is a (sidenote: Bacteria from the Clostridiales family, that colonize the gut of many species )  (SFB). This presence was confirmed through electron microscopy at the ileum level. In vitro, the SFB strain had the same ability as GSU mice feces to reduce the infection of epithelial cells by rotavirus. In vivo and isolated from the microbiota, it still provided, by itself, a protection against RV to immunosuppressed germ-free mice, and reduced the incidence of diarrhea in newborn non-immunodeficient mice, thus proving its own protective effect.

A new non-immune mechanism

Contrary to the researchers’ initial hypothesis, no known immune mechanism mediating the resistance to RV was involved (neither IL-22/IL-17 nor interferon λ). Several non-immune pathways could coexist: SFB could degrade a surface compound of RV and prevent it from interacting with the epithelium. But the main underlying mechanism seems to be located on the host side: the renewal of villi epithelial cells could be accelerated under the influence of SFB, thus causing the quick expulsion of cells potentially infected by RV. The microbiota could thus become a key pool to develop new strategies against viral infections.

Sources

Zhenda Shi, Jun Zou, Zhan Zhang, et al. Segmented Filamentous Bacteria Prevent and Cure Rotavirus Infection. Cell. 2019 Oct 17;179(3):644-658.e13.

Tags
Immunity Rotavirus Infection Diarrhea Microbiome Flora
    Created 28 January 2020
    Updated 15 July 2024

    About this article

    To know more about this topic.

    Main topic

    Diarrhea

    Medical practice

    Pediatrics Gastroenterology

    Content type

    News

    Continue reading

    News

    Infographics to share with your patients!

    Download original graphic material to explain to your patients the role of the microbiota in their da...

    Find out more
    24.01.2024

    Effect of gut microbiota on Covid vaccination, and vice-versa

    Read the article
    Everything you need to know about Microbiota & Immunity
    15.09.2022

    Everything you need to know about Microbiota & Immunity

    Read the article

    Probiotics: what exactly are we talking about?

    From the Latin pro and Greek bios meaning “for life”, the term “probiotic” was suggested over 60 year...

    Find out more

    How do you choose a probiotic for your patient?

    Faced with a plethora of products on the market, it's not always easy for health professionals to sug...

    Find out more
    Intestinal bacteria, illustration.
    24.08.2023

    Everything you need to know about probiotics

    Read the article
    09.12.2024

    Vaginal lactobacilli's anti-inflammatory superpowers

    Read the article
    28.01.2025

    Oral health: it all comes into play before age 3?

    Read the article
    • Our publications
      • News
      • Microbiota Mag
      • Thematic pages
      • Experts' point of view
      • Thematic folders
      • Overviews - Microbiota Magazine
    • About the Institute
      • About us
      • International Microbiota Observatory
      • Press room
      • Partnerships
    • Congresses
      • Congress calendar
      • Congress reviews
    • Continuing Medical Education
      • Accrediting courses
    • Useful documents
      • How to talk about
      • Infographics
      • IBS Diagnosis Check List
      • Patients Stories

      Join the microbiota community

      • Facebook
      • Twitter
      • LinkedIn
      • YouTube
      • Instagram
      • Bluesky

    Lay public section

    Find here your dedicated section
    Gastroenterology
    Gynecology
    Pediatrics
    General Medicine
    • English
    • Français
    • Español
    • Russian
    • Portuguese

    Browse the site

    • Our publications
      • News
      • Microbiota Mag
      • Thematic pages
      • Experts' point of view
      • Thematic folders
      • Overviews - Microbiota Magazine
    • About the Institute
      • About us
      • International Microbiota Observatory
      • Press room
      • Partnerships
    • Congresses
      • Congress calendar
      • Congress reviews
    • Continuing Medical Education
      • Accrediting courses
    • Useful documents
      • How to talk about
      • Infographics
      • IBS Diagnosis Check List
      • Patients Stories

      Join the microbiota community

      • Facebook
      • Twitter
      • LinkedIn
      • YouTube
      • Instagram
      • Bluesky

    Lay public section

    Find here your dedicated section

    Discover

    Gastroenterology
    Gynecology
    Pediatrics
    General Medicine

    Join the microbiota community

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    • Instagram
    • Bluesky

    Lay public section

    Find here your dedicated section

    Redirection

    You are about to be redirected and leave our website

    • Be redirected
    • Stay on the Biocodex Microbiota Institute's website

    Stay with us !

    Join the Microbiota Community of HCPs and researchers and receive “Microbiota Digest” and "Microbiota Mag" to stay up to date on the latest news about microbiota.

    * Mandatory Fields

    BMI 20-35

    Explore

    02.05.2025

    A new lens on chlamydia: beyond behavior, into the microbiome

    Read the article
    17.04.2025

    Sensitivity to the additive E466: the role of the microbiota

    Read the article
    Photo HCPs: Clinical context over quick fix: the fresh consensus on microbiome testing
    11.04.2025

    Clinical context over quick fix: the fresh consensus on microbiome testing

    Read the article

    Stay updated

    Join the Microbiota Community of HCPs and researchers and receive “Microbiota Digest” and "Microbiota Mag" to stay up to date on the latest news about microbiota.

    * Mandatory Fields

    BMI 20-35

    • Our publications
      • News
      • Microbiota Mag
      • Thematic pages
      • Experts' point of view
      • Thematic folders
      • Overviews - Microbiota Magazine
    • About the Institute
      • About us
      • International Microbiota Observatory
      • Press room
      • Partnerships
    • Congresses
      • Congress calendar
      • Congress reviews
    • Continuing Medical Education
      • Accrediting courses
    • Useful documents
      • How to talk about
      • Infographics
      • IBS Diagnosis Check List
      • Patients Stories

      Join the microbiota community

      • Facebook
      • Twitter
      • LinkedIn
      • YouTube
      • Instagram
      • Bluesky

    Lay public section

    Find here your dedicated section

    Discover

    Gastroenterology
    Gynecology
    Pediatrics
    General Medicine

    Lay public section

    Find here your dedicated section

    Join the microbiota community

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn
    • YouTube
    • Instagram
    • Bluesky

    © 2025 Biocodex. All rights reserved.

    • Legal notice
    • GTU
    • Data protection policy
    • Sitemap
    • Cookies settings
    • Digital accessibility : partially compliant
    Biocodex logo