Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Norovirus Gastroenteritis in a Birth Cohort in Southern India

  • Vipin Kumar Menon,

    Current address: MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, United States of America

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Santosh George,

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Rajiv Sarkar,

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Sidhartha Giri,

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Prasanna Samuel,

    Affiliation Department of Biostatistics, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Rosario Vivek,

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Anuradha Saravanabavan,

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Farzana Begum Liakath,

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Sasirekha Ramani,

    Current address: Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of America

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

  • Miren Iturriza-Gomara,

    Current address: Institute of Infection and Global Health, Liverpool, United Kingdom

    Affiliation Virus Reference Department, Centre for Infection, Health Protection Agency, London, United Kingdom

  • James J. Gray,

    Current address: Norwich Medical School, Norwich, United Kingdom

    Affiliation Virus Reference Department, Centre for Infection, Health Protection Agency, London, United Kingdom

  • David W. Brown,

    Affiliation Virus Reference Department, Centre for Infection, Health Protection Agency, London, United Kingdom

  • Mary K. Estes,

    Affiliation Department of Molecular Virology and Microbiology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of America

  • Gagandeep Kang

    gkang@cmcvellore.ac.in

    Affiliation Department of Gastrointestinal Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India

Abstract

Background

Noroviruses are an important cause of gastroenteritis but little is known about disease and re-infection rates in community settings in Asia.

Methods

Disease, re-infection rates, strain prevalence and genetic susceptibility to noroviruses were investigated in a birth cohort of 373 Indian children followed up for three years. Stool samples from 1856 diarrheal episodes and 147 vomiting only episodes were screened for norovirus by RT-PCR. Norovirus positivity was correlated with clinical data, secretor status and ABO blood group.

Results

Of 1856 diarrheal episodes, 207 (11.2%) were associated with norovirus, of which 49(2.6%) were norovirus GI, 150(8.1%) norovirus GII, and 8 (0.4%) were mixed infections with both norovirus GI and GII. Of the 147 vomiting only episodes, 30 (20.4%) were positive for norovirus in stool, of which 7 (4.8%) were norovirus GI and 23 (15.6%) GII. At least a third of the children developed norovirus associated diarrhea, with the first episode at a median age of 5 and 8 months for norovirus GI and GII, respectively. Norovirus GI.3 and GII.4 were the predominant genotypes (40.3% and 53.0%) with strain diversity and change in the predominant sub-cluster over time observed among GII viruses. A second episode of norovirus gastroenteritis was documented in 44/174 (25.3%) ever-infected children. Children with the G428A homozygous mutation for inactivation of the FUT2 enzyme (se428se428) were at a significantly lower risk (48/190) of infection with norovirus (p = 0.01).

Conclusions

This is the first report of norovirus documenting disease, re-infection and genetic susceptibility in an Asian birth cohort. The high incidence and apparent lack of genogroupII specific immunity indicate the need for careful studies on further characterization of strains, asymptomatic infection and shedding and immune response to further our understanding of norovirus infection and disease.

Introduction

Noroviruses are a leading cause of non-bacterial acute gastroenteritis (AGE) outbreaks in all age groups worldwide and are increasingly recognized as the second most common cause of sporadic AGE in children after rotavirus [13]. Noroviruses are non-enveloped, single-stranded positive-sense RNA viruses belonging to the family Caliciviridae. The viral genome consists of three open reading frames (ORFs), with ORF 1 encoding six non-structural proteins including the RNA dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp). ORF 2 encodes for the major capsid protein (VP1) and ORF 3 encodes a minor capsid protein (VP2) [4].

Noroviruses are divided into 5 genogroups (GI-GV) of which GI, GII and GIV are known to cause gastroenteritis in humans [5, 6]. Each genogroup is further divided into genetic clusters: 14 clusters in GI, 17 clusters in GII and 1 cluster in GIV have been described [7]. Among norovirus genogroups known to infect humans, GII noroviruses are the major genogroup causing outbreaks and sporadic infections worldwide and also predominate in community studies [8, 9].

Recent reports on norovirus infections from India were hospital-based studies of acute gastroenteritis [1012], similar to the majority of reports in children from other parts of the world. There are limited data on norovirus infections in the community mainly because of the difficulty in conducting such studies, whether cross-sectional or longitudinal. Very recently, a Peruvian birth cohort study found that 71% of 189 children followed upto 2 years of age, experienced norovirus associated diarrhea, that genogroup II infections were common and that repeat infections by the same genogroup were common, but repeat infections by the same genotype were rare[13].We have previously reported a limited comparison of pediatric norovirus disease and strain distribution between children with diarrhea in the hospital and in this cohort and asymptomatic children from this cohort that demonstrated the importance of noroviruses as gastrointestinal pathogens in Indian children, the predominance of GII noroviruses and a low prevalence of GI [9].

Some studies have examined the course of norovirus infection, susceptibility and disease in healthy adults through volunteer and outbreak studies, but few are population-based estimates of norovirus disease burden in a community [8, 13]. The present study provides disease incidence and re-infection rates of norovirus genogroupsI and II, with evaluation of putative host markers of susceptibility in an Asian population followed from birth to the age of 3 years.

Materials and Methods

Study Design

All 1856 diarrheal stool samples and 147 available stool samples from the 155 vomiting only episodes (collected within 0–15 days of a vomiting episode) from a birth cohort of 373 children, followed up to 3 years were screened for the presence of GI and GII norovirus. The enrollment criteria and methods for follow up of the cohort, which was established to study rotavirus infections, included biweekly home visits, fortnightly surveillance stool sampling, monthly anthropometry (weight and length/height) measurements, in addition to collection of samples and clinical information for all diarrheal episodes [14, 15]. At least one fecal sample was collected in 98% of diarrheal episodes within one week of onset. Venous blood or saliva was collected from the children at the end of the study for genetic analysis. Household hygiene was assessed on a 24-point scale, using a structured questionnaire covering aspects of water, food and personal hygiene; this questionnaire has previously been validated and used in the same community[16]. Written informed consent was obtained from parents of all children prior to the enrollment, and the study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the Christian Medical College, Vellore.

Definition, assessment of severity and etiology of diarrhea

Diarrhea was defined as the passage of ≥3 loose watery stools during a 24‐hr period or in breastfed children alone, a change in the number or consistency of stools as reported by the mother. An episode was defined as at least one day of diarrhea, preceded and followed by ≥2 days without diarrhea. The severity of diarrhea was assessed using the Vesikari scoring system [17] that was developed for rotavirus but has been used to score severity of norovirus diarrhea in recent studies [8, 11, 18]. An episode was considered mild for a score ≤5, moderately severe for a score of 6–10 and severe for scores >10. Diarrheal stool samples were screened for parasite ova and cysts by microscopy, for bacterial pathogens by culture, and for rotavirus by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Rota IDEIA; Dako, Ely, United Kingdom).

RNA extraction and cDNA synthesis

Viral RNA was extracted from 20% fecal suspension in Minimal Essential Medium using guanidium isothiocyanate and silica [19].The RNA was eluted into 50μl of diethylpyrocarbonate treated water containing 40 units of RNase inhibitor (Invitrogen, Life Technologies, Paisley, UK). Complementary DNA (cDNA) was generated by reverse transcription in the presence of random primers (hexamers) [Pharmacia Biotech, United Kingdom] using Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen, Life Technologies, Paisley, UK).

PCR for Norovirus GI

Screening of all stool samples from diarrheal episodes and vomiting only episodes for NoV GI was carried out using primers and conditions previously published [20]. The primers amplify an 84 bp fragment of the ORF 1–2 regions. Samples that were positive were cloned into the TOPO TA cloning kit as per the manufacturer’s instructions (Invitrogen, Life Technologies, UK). Clones were purified using QIAprep Spin Miniprep Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, USA) and subjected to automated sequence analysis.

PCR for Norovirus GII

Two separate PCR reactions were carried out for all the samples using previously published primers specific to the RNA dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) and ORF 1–2 regions as per previously published cycling conditions, amplifying a 113bp and 468bp fragment, respectively[20, 21]. Samples with amplification using either primer set were considered positive for norovirus and sequencing was attempted for all amplicons.

Sequence Analysis

Sequencing of the positive amplicons was carried out by using the ABI PRISM Big Dye Terminator cycle sequencing ready reaction kit (Applied Biosystems, CA, USA). The amplicons corresponding to the ORF 1–2 junction region were sequenced when available; else the RdRp region was sequenced. Sequences were resolved using an automated DNA sequencer ABI PRISM 310 Genetic Analyzer. The sequences were imported into BioEdit software (version 7). Phylogenetic analysis was carried out using reference sequences from the norovirus molecular epidemiology database (Noronet) at www.rivm.nl and sequences from GenBank. Variants of NoV GII.4 were detected using the norovirus genotyping tool from http://www.rivm.nl/mpf/norovirus/typingtool. Neighbor joining method (10000 pseudo replicates) with MEGA software (version 4) was used to assign the samples to a genotype based on >90% homology at the nucleotide level with other strains within a given genotype [22].

Fucosyltransferase 2 (FUT2) genotyping for Secretor Status

Genomic DNA was isolated from buccal epithelial cells or blood using the QIAamp DNA Mini Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) according to manufacturer’s instructions. The amplification of a region of the FUT2 gene and genotyping for two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) was carried out using published methods [23, 24]. The TaqMan Genotyping Master Mix (Applied Biosystems) and Custom TaqMan SNP Genotyping Assay for the 428 and 385 SNP of the FUT2 gene designed by J. Le Pendu, France and M. Lay, USA (Applied Biosystems) respectively were used in a final volume of 20 μl.

ABO and secretor phenotyping from saliva

Saliva samples that were boiled and cooled were used to coat 96-well high-binding plates (Costar, Corning, N.Y.) at room temperature for 4hrs and then blocked with 10% non-fat milk (blotto) overnight at 4°C. After washing, primary antibodies Anti-Lea Gamma-clone (1:100), Anti-A Gamma-clone (1:200) and Anti-B Gamma-clone (1:100) from ImmucorGamma, Georgia, USA, BG-6 (anti-Leb) antibody (1:100) from Covance, Texas, USA were added and plates incubated at 37°C for 1hr. This was followed by the addition of a Goat anti-Mouse IgG-HRP (Sigma, USA) and UEA-1 lectin-HRP (Sigma, USA) at 37°C for 1 hr. The detection was carried out with TMB peroxidase substrate (KPL, Gaithersburg, MD) and the plates were read at OD450[25]. A pooled saliva sample and PBS were used as positive and negative controls, respectively.

Statistical Analysis

The data were analyzed using STATA 10.0 for Windows (STATA Corp., TX, USA). Descriptive analysis was performed for all explanatory variables. Statistical significance of the observed differences in outcome between explanatory variables was assessed using Chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test for categorical variables and two-tailed t-test or Mann-Whitney U test for continuous variables, depending on the distribution of the data. A p-value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Seasonality of norovirus-associated diarrhea was assessed by fitting a sine curve to a time-series of the monthly stool positivity rates (proportion of diarrheal episodes attributed to norovirus divided by the total number of diarrheal episodes). The intensity of the seasonal fluctuation was computed by calculating the peak-to-low ratio using a modified version of the Edward’s technique [26].Association between distribution of Histo-Blood Group Antigen and secretor status among the norovirus infected and non-infected individuals were ascertained through logistic regression analysis and odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) calculated.

Height-for age (HAZ), weight-for-height (WHZ) and weight-for-age (WAZ) z-scores were calculated using the 2006 WHO child growth standards as the reference population [27], and children classified as stunted (HAZ<-2 SD), wasted (WHZ<-2 SD), underweight (WAZ <-2 SD) or normal based on their respective z-scores.

Results

A total of 1,856 episodes of diarrhea were experienced by the 373 children in the cohort, with a previously published incidence of gastrointestinal illness of 3.6 per child year in infancy and 1.64 and 1.16 per child year, respectively during the subsequent years [14]. The median (IQR) age of the first diarrheal episode was 3 (1–6) months. A total of 149 (149/373, 40%) children had 207 episodes of diarrhea associated with norovirus detection (details available in S1 Dataset). Norovirus GI and GII were detected in 49episodes (49/1856, 2.6%) and 150 episodes (150/1856, 8.1%) of diarrhea respectively; eight (8/1856, 0.4%) episodes were mixed infections with both norovirus GI and GII. Of the available 147 stool samples from the 155 vomiting only episodes which were collected within 0–15 days of vomiting, norovirus GI and GII were associated with 7 episodes (7/147, 4.8%) and 23 episodes (23/147, 15.6%) respectively, and there were no mixed infections.

Table 1 compares the clinical characteristics of diarrheal episodes associated with norovirus between GI and GII. The median (IQR) age at first symptomatic norovirus infection was 5 (3–7) months and 8 (5–15) months among norovirus GI and GII respectively. The median (IQR) duration of a diarrheal episode and proportion associated with vomiting and fever were similar for the two viral genogroups (Table 1).

thumbnail
Table 1. Comparison of clinical characteristics between norovirus GI and GII diarrheal episodes.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.t001

Re-infection

One hundred and thirty of the 149 (87.2%) children who ever had a norovirus associated diarrhea had only one episode during the 3-year follow-up period. Forty-four of 149 (29.5%) children had a re-infection with either genogroup. Children showed a higher rate of re-infection with norovirus GII (30/123, 24.3%) compared to norovirus GI (6/51, 11.8%). Eight of the 174 children (4.6%) had both norovirus GI and GII infections. Among the 30 children with 2 or more norovirus GII positive diarrheal episodes, three children experienced the second episode 6, 8 and 9 days after the first episode, which may represent continued shedding.

Only one child (1.9%) with norovirus GI re-infection was re-infected with the same genotype and the rest had a different genotype during re-infection (Fig 1). The duration between primary and re-infection with the same genotype was 270 days. The shortest and longest duration between re-infection with a different genotype was 26 and 811 days.

thumbnail
Fig 1. Norovirus genotypes in primary and subsequent diarrheal episodes in children who had more than one infection.

Each line represents one child with re-infection, while the age in months is on the x- axis. Norovirus genotypes are represented by symbols. Samples that failed sequencing have been denoted as Failed in the figure. A) Children with re-infections with either norovirus GI and GII. B) All norovirus GI infection children who were re-infected with either GI or GII noroviruses. GI genotypes are shown, while GII infections are shown only as genogroup. C) All norovirus GII infection children who were re-infected with either GI or GII noroviruses. GII genotypes are shown while GI infections are shown only as genogroup.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.g001

Of the 30 children with norovirus GII re-infection, genotype could not be identified for 7 samples. Of the remaining, 12 children were re-infected with the same genotype, three of whom may have had continuous shedding as stated above, and 11 with a different genotype (Fig 1). Reinfections with GII.4 in six of nine re-infected children were with different variants (Table 2). The shortest and longest duration between re-infection with the same genotype, other than the three who were less than 10 days, were 74 and 534 days. Re-infection with different genotypes ranged from 16 days to 767 days.

Presence of co-pathogens

Mixed infections with other pathogens were seen in 56/207 (27%) norovirus-associated diarrheal episodes, of which 52 episodes had a single co-pathogen and 4 had two co-pathogens. The commonest co-pathogen isolated was rotavirus, which was present in 36/56(64.2%) episodes of mixed infections, followed by Giardia in 9/56 (16.1%) episodes; other co-pathogens were: Cryptosporidium (5/56, 8.9%), Aeromonas (4/56, 7.1%), Vibrio (3/56, 5.4%), Shigella (2/56, 3.6%) and Ascaris (1/56, 1.7%). The comparison of clinical features between diarrheal episodes of single and mixed infections is presented in Table 3. Episodes of mixed infection had higher association with comorbidities such as vomiting and fever, and were more severe.

thumbnail
Table 3. Comparison of clinical features between diarrheal episodes of single infections with norovirus and mixed infections of norovirus and other enteric pathogens.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.t003

Seasonality of norovirus-associated diarrhea

Norovirus-associated diarrhea was seen to occur during all months of the year, ranging from a stool positivity rate of 6.2% in November to 17.2% in May (Fig 2). The peak-to-low (95% CI) ratio of seasonal intensity of occurrence of norovirus diarrhea was 1.57 (1.05–2.20), suggestive of a mild increase in the proportion of norovirus-associated diarrheal episodes during the summer season.

thumbnail
Fig 2. Seasonal fluctuations in the monthly occurrence of episodes of norovirus-associated diarrhea.

The y-axis represents the monthly stool positivity rates (proportion of diarrheal episodes attributed to norovirus divided by the total number of diarrheal episodes). The x-axis represents the month of the year.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.g002

Age and norovirus-associated diarrhea

A total of 50 (87.7%) and 98 (62%) episodes of diarrhea in children ≤1 year of age were associated with norovirus GI and GII respectively. The median age of norovirus diarrhea was 7 (4.5–12) months. Median age (IQR) of diarrhea with norovirus GI and GII were 5 (3–7) months and 8.8(5.7–15.3) months respectively. The median (IQR) duration in infants was similar between the two genogroups of the virus (Table 1). Diarrheal severity was greater in norovirus GII episodes occurring during infancy (Median [IQR] Vesikari score = 6 [59]) than at a later age (Median [IQR] Vesikari score = 5 [47], p = 0.016); this was reversed for norovirus GI episodes, although the difference was not statistically significant (Median [IQR] Vesikari score = 5 [57] vs. 7 [68], p = 0.111). No difference in associated vomiting or fever between episodes occurring below and above the age of 1 year was observed among the two viral genogroups.

The overall incidence of norovirus diarrhea was 0.14 (0.12–0.16) per child-year which is lower than the incidence of rotavirus diarrhea in the same population, 0.25 (0.22–0.29) per child-year (Gladstone et al., personal communication). The incidence of norovirus diarrhea was highest during the first year of life, 0.26 (0.22–0.32) per child-year and decreased to 0.09 (0.07–0.13) and 0.07 (0.05–0.10) per child-year during the second and third year, respectively.

Breastfeeding and norovirus-associated diarrhea

Eight (8/57, 14%) GI and 11 (11/158,7%) GII associated diarrheal episodes occurred before the introduction of supplementary feeding or weaning (Table 1). No significant patterns were observed in the duration (IQR) of breastfeeding among the norovirus infected (n = 149, 3 [14] months) and uninfected children (n = 224, 2 [13] months); p = 0.753. There was no difference in the severity of diarrheal episodes, vomiting or febrile symptoms pre- and post-weaning in children with either genogroup.

Household hygiene and norovirus-associated diarrhea

The median (IQR) household hygiene score among the norovirus infected and uninfected children was 11 (8–14) and 11 (9–13.5), respectively (p = 0.500). When the household hygiene scores were compared between children with single (n = 105, 11 [813]) and multiple (n = 44, 10 [714]) norovirus infections, they were found to be similar (p = 0.730). Similarly, children with only GI infections (n = 26, 10[813]) had comparable hygiene scores to children with only GII (n = 98, 11 [814],p = 0.758) infections.

Growth and norovirus-associated diarrhea

Complete anthropometry data was available for 362 (97.1%) of the 373 children under observation. The proportion (with 95% CI) of stunted, wasted and underweight children at 12, 24, and 36months of age among those with and without norovirus infection is presented in Fig 3. The proportions of stunted, wasted and underweight children were comparable between those with and without norovirus infection at all the three time points. However, when the anthropometric data were compared between children with single and multiple norovirus infections, a higher proportion of children with multiple infections were stunted (61.9 vs. 41.7%, p = 0.027) and wasted (16.7% vs. 3.9%, p = 0.014) at 12 and 24 months of age, respectively (Fig 3). The proportion of stunted, wasted and underweight children was comparable between children with norovirus GI and GII infections.

thumbnail
Fig 3.

Proportion (with 95% CI) of (A) stunted, (B) wasted and (C) underweight children at 12, 24 and 36 months of age. The y-axis depicts the proportion of children with growth deficiency whereas the x-axis represents age in months. The point prevalence is presented as a circle and the 95% CI is represented as vertical lines. The solid vertical line represents uninfected children, the dashed and dotted lines represent those with single and multiple norovirus infections, respectively.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.g003

Genotyping

A total of 215 samples were genotyped by sequencing of the amplicons. Three GI and 26 GII samples failed in sequencing reactions, but are included in the overall analysis because all PCRs were repeated at least twice, and band sizes re-confirmed with absence of non-specific bands.

Sequence analysis of the GI genogroups showed a predominance of GI.3 genotype in 23/57 (40.3%) of the samples, followed by GI.1 (15/57, 26.3%), GI.2 (9/57, 15.7%) and GI.6 (6/57, 10.5%). Phylogenetic analysis of norovirus GII genogroup of either the capsid or the RdRp region (Fig 4) showed the predominance of GII.4 genotype in 70/132 (53.0%) of the samples, followed by GII.2 (28/132, 21.2%) and GII.3 (18/132,13.6%), respectively.

thumbnail
Fig 4. Dendrogram constructed using neighbor joining of nucleotide sequences corresponding to fragment of 468 bp of the ORF 1–2 region of the Norovirus capsid encoding gene.

Bootstrap values for 10000 pseudo replicates are shown. The reference strains included for comparison with accession numbers are: Hunter284/04/AU (DQ078794), Farmington Hills/02/US (AY502023), Sakai/04-179/05/JP (AB220922), Bristol/1993/UK (X76716), Maizuru/010426/2001/JP (EF547404), M7/1999/US (AY130761), Toronto/1991/CA (AAA18930), Seacroft/1990/UK (AJ277620), Hu/SaitamaU16/197/JP (AB039778), Erfurt546/2000/DE (AF427118), Mc37/2001/TH (AY237415), Wortley/1990/UK (AJ277618), Chitta/1996/JP (AB032758), Snow Mountain/1976/US (AY134748), Melksham/95/UK (X81879), KY-89/1989/JP (L23828), Norwalk/1968/US (M87661).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.g004

The GII.4 strains were placed in 3 sub-clusters when analyzed with reference sequences. Of the 35 samples identified as GII.4 at the ORF 1–2 capsid junctions, 17 strains with 96% nucleotide identity clustered in the Hunter sub-cluster, 6 with 93% nucleotide identity with the Farmington sub-cluster and 12 with 98% nucleotide identity with the Sakai sub-cluster. Fifteen children between the ages of 2.5–8.3 months were infected with the Hunter sub-cluster, with 2 children having two episodes of infection 17 and 159 days apart, respectively. Six children between the ages of 4.2–8.6 months were infected with the Farmington sub-cluster. The Hunter and Farmington sub-cluster infections were seen in children between the years 2002–2003, indicating the circulation of this sub-cluster in the community. However, there was a predominance of the Sakai sub-cluster in 12 children who were infected between 2004–2005. Nine samples were genotyped as GII.3 and clustered with 94% nucleotide identity to the Toronto strain. Ten samples were genotyped as GII.2 with 98% nucleotide identity to the Snow Mountain strain.

Nucleotide sequences of positive samples from the study have been deposited in the GenBank and the accession numbers are JN654720-JN654766.

Association of blood group and secretor status with norovirus infection

ABO blood group and secretor status were determined for 293 children from whom appropriate samples were available. The most common ABO blood group was O (39.3%), followed by B (32.5%), A (20.9%) and AB (7.2%). One hundred eighty-six children (186/305, 60.9%) were secretor positive.

Secretor status was significantly associated with overall norovirus GI (Table 4), but not with norovirus GII infection (Table 5). No significant association between the ABO blood group and norovirus GI or GII infection was observed (Tables 4 and 5). Among the 48 children with GI infection, those with GI.1 genotype (n = 15) were all secretor positive, whereas among the children with non GI.1 infection (n = 33), 84.9% were secretor positives although the difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.167). For the 115 children with GII infection, 75% of those with GII.4 (n = 56) were secretor positives, whereas only 57.8% of children with non GII.4 infection (n = 57) were secretor positives (p = 0.054). Moreover, genotyping for the FUT2 SNP showed that children with the G428A homozygous mutation for inactivation of the FUT2 enzyme (se428se428) are significantly at a lower risk of infection with norovirus (Tables 4 and 5). There was no significant association between norovirus diarrhea with any genotype with any specific blood group.

thumbnail
Table 4. Distribution of Histo-Blood Group and Secretor status among norovirus GI infected and non-infected individuals.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.t004

thumbnail
Table 5. Distribution of Histo-Blood Group and Secretor status among norovirus GII infected and non-infected individuals.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.t005

Discussion

This is the first longitudinal study of norovirus gastroenteritis in a birth cohort of children in India. Most estimates of disease burden are based on hospital studies, which sample the more severe end of the spectrum of disease, and do not have community based denominator data. In this birth cohort from an urban slum in southern India, norovirus was a significant cause of diarrhea, associated with 11.2% of episodes, second only to rotavirus, and affecting almost half the cohort. In a recent study from India, 10.7% positivity was found in children <7 years of age, with 40% positivity in the ≤1 year olds [10], but this was a cross-sectional study in children presenting to hospital with gastroenteritis. Community based studies from developed countries like Europe have reported higher norovirus rates, 24.5% in children <5, and 28% in those ≤1 year old in the UK [28], and in the Netherlands, 14% in children <4 years and 14.3% in children ≤1 year of age [29], but these findings are in settings where higher rates of viral gastroenteritis are reported in children presenting to hospitals than in developing countries.

A majority of the norovirus reports from developing countries are hospital based and the detection ranges from 5.5% in Vietnam, 15% in Nicaragua, 9.3% in Tunisia, 30% in Iraq, 3.7% in Brazil and 32.1% in urban Peru, 11.3% in Malawi and 14% in Guatemala [3037]. Two cohort studies carried from Chile and Peruvian Amazon have shown 18% and 25% of acute diarrhea episodes in children <24 months were due to norovirus respectively [38, 39]. A recently published birth cohort study among children from Peruvian urban community showed a prevalence of 22.8% among the diarrheal stool samples screened[13]. In our study, a significantly higher proportion of children with multiple infections were stunted, wasted and underweight at age 12 and 24 months irrespective of genotype which is in contrast to that seen among children from the Peruvian study where GII exhibited a more significant effect[13].

Children who had vomiting only episodes had high positivity for norovirus GI or GII (30/147, 20.4%) in stool compared to the proportion of diarrheal stools positive for norovirus (215/1856, 11.6%). Earlier studies on children have reported a higher percentage of vomiting episodes than diarrheal episodes in norovirus associated outbreaks of gastroenteritis, described as 'winter vomiting disease'[40].A study on norovirus gastroenteritis in military trainees from the USA also reported a higher norovirus positivity in vomiting episodes (80%) compared to diarrheal episodes (67%)[41].

The median Vesikari score for norovirus GI and GII diarrhea was 5, similar to studies from other developing countries [8, 42], and was less severe than that associated with rotavirus disease in this cohort, which had a median severity score of 7.6 [43]. The median age of the first symptomatic infection of norovirus GI and GII was 5 and 8 months respectively, slightly younger than 9 months and 11 months as reported from studies in Chile and Brazil, respectively [8, 44].In a study examining the global age distribution of pediatric norovirus cases, approximately 70% of norovirus cases occurred in the age group between 6 months to 2 years [45]. The study recommended completion of norovirus vaccination in children by 6 months of age to potentially prevent a greater burden of disease compared to completion of vaccination at 12 months. The recommendation would hold true for our study population where the median age (IQR) of norovirus diarrhea was 7 (4.5–12) months. Early completion of immunization is likely to have a greater benefit in reducing disease burden, particularly for GII infections where the primary infection was more severe.

The severity and frequency of vomiting and fever associated with norovirus was higher among the GII infected children (Table 1); this finding is similar to studies from Peru [13, 38].In human volunteer challenge studies and vaccine trials, the definition of norovirus illness includes individuals who experience only vomiting in the absence of diarrhea as a clinical endpoint [4648]. In this study, the examination of stool samples from children who presented with vomiting alone as a primary clinical symptom suggests that there may be an underestimation of norovirus disease burden by exclusion of cases presenting with vomiting only.

Symptomatic norovirus associated diarrhea was detected in children during the first 6 months of age suggesting that breast feeding did not confer protection, unlike the absence of symptomatic infection among younger children in the Peruvian study [13]. Re-infection with norovirus was associated with diarrhea in a quarter of ever-infected children, this is in contrast with reports from the Chilean birth cohort where 40% (10/25) of re-infections with norovirus were symptomatic, the lower number of re-infections seen could be due to the difference in size of the study population [8]. In the birth cohort from Peru, repeat infections by the same genogroup of norovirus were seen, but the majority of the reinfections were by a different genotype or variant of GII.4. The GII.4 variants described in Peru were 2006b, 2007, 2008 and 2010 [13]. The data in this study showed higher rates of reinfections with the same genogroup and genotype of norovirus than in Peru. Since these studies were carried out in distinct time periods (Vellore, 2002–2006 and Peru, 2007–2011), some of these differences may be due to the difference in circulating GII.4 variants between the two studies (Table 2).Re-infection with the same genogroup and genotype was observed in this study suggesting that lower genogroup or genotype specific immunity may occur in India, in contrast to the Peruvian study where genotype-specific immunity was observed[13].

A high degree of genetic diversity was seen among circulating noroviruses, with four GI genotypes and nine genotypes of norovirus GII detected. These data are similar to other studies where a higher diversity of norovirus has been documented in gastroenteritis in the community when compared to outbreaks, generally in the adult and/or elderly population [4, 28, 4953]. GI.3 (40.3%) was the predominant strain detected in the cohort followed by GI.1 (26.3%), GI.2 (15.7%) and GI.6 (10.5%). GII.4 was the predominant genotype while GII.2 (17.7%) and GII.3 (11.4%) were also detected in significant proportions, similar to previous reports [28, 49]. Other studies in India have reported a predominance of GII.4 strains; however, these were predominantly outbreaks studies [9, 10]. The GII.4 strains detected in the current study clustered into3sub-clusters, with a temporal distribution of the Hunter sub-cluster being replaced by Farmington and then by Sakai. Evolutionary analysis studies have shown that the newer strains originate by amino acid changes due to positive selection and recombination which drives the persistence of newer strains in the human population [54].

The link between the Histo-Blood Group Antigen (HBGA) binding and secretor status is well documented for the prototype GI virus, Norwalk virus. In this study, there was no significant association between blood groups and norovirus GI infection, but higher infection rates were seen among secretors compared to non-secretors, which is similar to previous studies of volunteer challenge and in vitro binding studies that have shown that carbohydrate binding is essential for GI infection [23, 5557]. There was no significant association between blood groups or secretor status with norovirus GII infection which is consistent with other reports that have shown no association between host genetic factors and symptomatic infection of norovirus GII[5860]. Expression of the FUT2 gene and susceptibility to norovirus infection was examined by checking for two common mutations in Asian populations, which showed that children with a nonsense mutation at G428A were significantly at a lower risk of infection with norovirus, as has been previously shown by other studies [61, 62].

In summary, this report shows that norovirus infections are a common cause of pediatric gastroenteritis in southern India. A previous report from the same region found 15% of hospitalized gastroenteritis cases in children <5 years of age to be positive for norovirus [9]. In the community, norovirus infections were associated with mild disease, but symptomatic re-infections were common. The continued replacement of strains in the population suggests the need for strain specific vaccines, or identification of epitopes that are conserved across the norovirus variants could be used to generate broadly protective vaccines. In order to assess the true rate of infection with noroviruses in this community and the role of prior infections in protection from subsequent infection or disease, the investigation of asymptomatic shedding and immune responses would be of interest.

Supporting Information

S1 Dataset. Details of children with norovirus diarrhea.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157007.s001

(XLSX)

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: GK MI-G MKE DWB JJG. Performed the experiments: VKM S. George S. Giri SR RV AS FBL. Analyzed the data: VKM RS PS SR MI-G MKE GK. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: MI-G MKE GK. Wrote the paper: VKM S. George RS S. Giri PS SR MI-G DWB JJG MKE GK.

References

  1. 1. Cheng WX, Ye XH, Yang XM, Li YN, Jin M, Jin Y, et al. Epidemiological study of human calicivirus infection in children with gastroenteritis in Lanzhou from 2001 to 2007. Arch Virol. 2010;155(4):553–5. pmid:20180141
  2. 2. Hall AJ, Lopman BA, Payne DC, Patel MM, Gastanaduy PA, Vinje J, et al. Norovirus disease in the United States. Emerg Infect Dis. 2013;19(8):1198–205. pmid:23876403
  3. 3. Hall AJ, Wikswo ME, Manikonda K, Roberts VA, Yoder JS, Gould LH. Acute Gastroenteritis Surveillance through the National Outbreak Reporting System, United States. Emerg Infect Dis. 2013;19(8):1305–9. pmid:23876187
  4. 4. Glass RI, Parashar UD, Estes MK. Norovirus gastroenteritis. N Engl J Med. 2009;361(18):1776–85. pmid:19864676
  5. 5. Ramani S, Kang G. Viruses causing childhood diarrhoea in the developing world. Curr Opin Infect Dis. 2009;22(5):477–82. pmid:19633550
  6. 6. Knipe DMH, Peter M., editor. Fields Virology. 5th ed. Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2007.
  7. 7. Chung JY, Han TH, Park SH, Kim SW, Hwang ES. Detection of GII-4/2006b variant and recombinant noroviruses in children with acute gastroenteritis, South Korea. J Med Virol. 2010;82(1):146–52. pmid:19950237
  8. 8. O'Ryan ML, Lucero Y, Prado V, Santolaya ME, Rabello M, Solis Y, et al. Symptomatic and asymptomatic rotavirus and norovirus infections during infancy in a Chilean birth cohort. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2009;28(10):879–84. pmid:19672213
  9. 9. Monica B, Ramani S, Banerjee I, Primrose B, Iturriza-Gomara M, Gallimore CI, et al. Human caliciviruses in symptomatic and asymptomatic infections in children in Vellore, South India. J Med Virol. 2007;79(5):544–51. pmid:17385696
  10. 10. Chhabra P, Dhongade RK, Kalrao VR, Bavdekar AR, Chitambar SD. Epidemiological, clinical, and molecular features of norovirus infections in western India. J Med Virol. 2009;81(5):922–32. pmid:19319938
  11. 11. Chhabra P, Chitambar SD. Norovirus genotype IIb associated acute gastroenteritis in India. J Clin Virol. 2008;42(4):429–32. pmid:18467163
  12. 12. Rachakonda G, Choudekar A, Parveen S, Bhatnagar S, Patwari A, Broor S. Genetic diversity of noroviruses and sapoviruses in children with acute sporadic gastroenteritis in New Delhi, India. J Clin Virol. 2008;43(1):42–8. pmid:18602864
  13. 13. Saito M, Goel-Apaza S, Espetia S, Velasquez D, Cabrera L, Loli S, et al. Multiple norovirus infections in a birth cohort in a Peruvian peri-urban community. Clin Infect Dis. 2013.
  14. 14. Gladstone BP, Das AR, Rehman AM, Jaffar S, Estes MK, Muliyil J, et al. Burden of illness in the first 3 years of life in an Indian slum. J Trop Pediatr. 2010;56(4):221–6. pmid:20028725
  15. 15. Gladstone BP, Muliyil JP, Jaffar S, Wheeler JG, Le Fevre A, Iturriza-Gomara M, et al. Infant morbidity in an Indian slum birth cohort. Arch Dis Child. 2008;93(6):479–84. pmid:17916587
  16. 16. Brick T, Primrose B, Chandrasekhar R, Roy S, Muliyil J, Kang G. Water contamination in urban south India: household storage practices and their implications for water safety and enteric infections. Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2004;207(5):473–80. pmid:15575563
  17. 17. Lukkarinen H, Eerola E, Ruohola A, Vainionpaa R, Jalava J, Kotila S, et al. Clostridium difficile ribotype 027-associated disease in children with norovirus infection. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2009;28(9):847–8. pmid:19636284
  18. 18. Murata T, Katsushima N, Mizuta K, Muraki Y, Hongo S, Matsuzaki Y. Prolonged norovirus shedding in infants <or = 6 months of age with gastroenteritis. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2007;26(1):46–9. pmid:17195705
  19. 19. Boom R, Sol CJ, Salimans MM, Jansen CL, Wertheim-van Dillen PM, van der Noordaa J. Rapid and simple method for purification of nucleic acids. J Clin Microbiol. 1990;28(3):495–503. pmid:1691208
  20. 20. Kageyama T, Kojima S, Shinohara M, Uchida K, Fukushi S, Hoshino FB, et al. Broadly reactive and highly sensitive assay for Norwalk-like viruses based on real-time quantitative reverse transcription-PCR. J Clin Microbiol. 2003;41(4):1548–57. pmid:12682144
  21. 21. Green J, Gallimore CI, Norcott JP, Lewis D, Brown DW. Broadly reactive reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction for the diagnosis of SRSV-associated gastroenteritis. J Med Virol. 1995;47(4):392–8. pmid:8636708
  22. 22. Ando T, Noel JS, Fankhauser RL. Genetic classification of "Norwalk-like viruses. J Infect Dis. 2000;181 Suppl 2:S336–48. pmid:10804147
  23. 23. Hutson AM, Airaud F, LePendu J, Estes MK, Atmar RL. Norwalk virus infection associates with secretor status genotyped from sera. J Med Virol. 2005;77(1):116–20. pmid:16032732
  24. 24. Lay MK, Atmar RL, Guix S, Bharadwaj U, He H, Neill FH, et al. Norwalk virus does not replicate in human macrophages or dendritic cells derived from the peripheral blood of susceptible humans. Virology. 2010;406(1):1–11. pmid:20667573
  25. 25. Reeck A, Kavanagh O, Estes MK, Opekun AR, Gilger MA, Graham DY, et al. Serological correlate of protection against norovirus-induced gastroenteritis. J Infect Dis. 2010;202(8):1212–8. pmid:20815703
  26. 26. Brookhart MA, Rothman KJ. Simple estimators of the intensity of seasonal occurrence. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2008;8:67. pmid:18945366
  27. 27. Group WHOMGRS. WHO Child Growth Standards based on length/height, weight and age. Acta paediatrica. 2006;450:76–85. pmid:16817681
  28. 28. Iturriza-Gomara M, Elliot AJ, Dockery C, Fleming DM, Gray JJ. Structured surveillance of infectious intestinal disease in pre-school children in the community: 'The Nappy Study'. Epidemiol Infect. 2009;137(7):922–31. pmid:19017426
  29. 29. de Wit MA, Koopmans MP, Kortbeek LM, Wannet WJ, Vinje J, van Leusden F, et al. Sensor, a population-based cohort study on gastroenteritis in the Netherlands: incidence and etiology. Am J Epidemiol. 2001;154(7):666–74. pmid:11581101
  30. 30. Nguyen TA, Yagyu F, Okame M, Phan TG, Trinh QD, Yan H, et al. Diversity of viruses associated with acute gastroenteritis in children hospitalized with diarrhea in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. J Med Virol. 2007;79(5):582–90. pmid:17385670
  31. 31. Bucardo F, Nordgren J, Carlsson B, Paniagua M, Lindgren PE, Espinoza F, et al. Pediatric norovirus diarrhea in Nicaragua. J Clin Microbiol. 2008;46(8):2573–80. pmid:18562593
  32. 32. Hassine-Zaafrane M, Sdiri-Loulizi K, Kaplon J, Salem IB, Pothier P, Aouni M, et al. Prevalence and genetic diversity of norovirus infection in Tunisian children (2007–2010). J Med Virol. 2013;85(6):1100–10. pmid:23532785
  33. 33. Al-Mashhadani MN, Nakagomi O, Dove W, Ahmed H, Nakagomi T, Hart CA, et al. Norovirus gastroenteritis among children in Iraqi Kurdistan. J Med Virol. 2008;80(3):506–9. pmid:18205231
  34. 34. Ribeiro LR, Giuberti RS, Barreira DM, Saick KW, Leite JP, Miagostovich MP, et al. Hospitalization due to norovirus and genotypes of rotavirus in pediatric patients, state of Espirito Santo. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz. 2008;103(2):201–6. pmid:18425274
  35. 35. Parashar UD, Li JF, Cama R, DeZalia M, Monroe SS, Taylor DN, et al. Human caliciviruses as a cause of severe gastroenteritis in Peruvian children. J Infect Dis. 2004;190(6):1088–92. pmid:15319858
  36. 36. Trainor E, Lopman B, Iturriza-Gomara M, Dove W, Ngwira B, Nakagomi O, et al. Detection and molecular characterisation of noroviruses in hospitalised children in Malawi, 1997–2007. J Med Virol. 2013;85(7):1299–306. pmid:23918547
  37. 37. Estevez A, Arvelo W, Hall AJ, Lopez MR, Lopez B, Reyes L, et al. Prevalence and genetic diversity of norovirus among patients with acute diarrhea in Guatemala. J Med Virol. 2013;85(7):1293–8. pmid:23595770
  38. 38. Yori PP, Schwab K, Gilman RH, Nappier S, Portocarrero DV, Black RE, et al. Norovirus highly prevalent cause of endemic acute diarrhea in children in the peruvian Amazon. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2009;28(9):844–7. pmid:19636281
  39. 39. O'Ryan ML, Pena A, Vergara R, Diaz J, Mamani N, Cortes H, et al. Prospective characterization of norovirus compared with rotavirus acute diarrhea episodes in chilean children. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2010;29(9):855–9. pmid:20581736
  40. 40. Adler JL, Zickl R. Winter vomiting disease. J Infect Dis. 1969;119:668–73. pmid:5795109
  41. 41. Arness MK, Feighner BH, Canham ML, et al. Norwalk-like viral gastroenteritis outbreak in U.S. army trainees. Emerging Infect Dis. 2000;6:204–7. pmid:10756159
  42. 42. Nakagomi T, Correia JB, Nakagomi O, Montenegro FM, Cuevas LE, Cunliffe NA, et al. Norovirus infection among children with acute gastroenteritis in Recife, Brazil: disease severity is comparable to rotavirus gastroenteritis. Arch Virol. 2008;153(5):957–60. pmid:18317870
  43. 43. Banerjee I, Iturriza-Gomara M, Rajendran P, Primrose B, Ramani S, Gray JJ, et al. Molecular characterization of G11P[25] and G3P[3] human rotavirus strains associated with asymptomatic infection in South India. J Med Virol. 2007;79(11):1768–74. pmid:17854037
  44. 44. Barreira DM, Ferreira MS, Fumian TM, Checon R, de Sadovsky AD, Leite JP, et al. Viral load and genotypes of noroviruses in symptomatic and asymptomatic children in Southeastern Brazil. J Clin Virol. 2010;47(1):60–4. pmid:20004146
  45. 45. Shioda K, Kambhampati A, Hall AJ, Lopman BA. Global age distribution of pediatric norovirus cases. Vaccine. 2015;33(33):4065–8. pmid:26051514
  46. 46. Atmar RL, Bernstein DI, Harro CD, Al-Ibrahim MS, Chen WH, Ferreira J, et al. Norovirus vaccine against experimental human Norwalk Virus illness. N Engl J Med. 2011;365(23):2178–87. pmid:22150036
  47. 47. Atmar RL, Opekun AR, Gilger MA, Estes MK, Crawford SE, Neill FH, et al. Determination of the 50% human infectious dose for Norwalk virus. J Infect Dis. 2014;209(7):1016–22. pmid:24253285
  48. 48. Bernstein DI, Atmar RL, Lyon GM, Treanor JJ, Chen WH, Jiang X, et al. Norovirus vaccine against experimental human GII.4 virus illness: a challenge study in healthy adults. J Infect Dis. 2015;211(6):870–8. pmid:25210140
  49. 49. Nataraju SM, Pativada M, Chatterjee D, Nayak MK, Ganesh B, Bhattacharya MK, et al. Molecular epidemiology of norovirus infections in children and adults: sequence analysis of region C indicates genetic diversity of NVGII strains in Kolkata, India. Epidemiol Infect. 2010:1–9.
  50. 50. Chhabra P, Walimbe AM, Chitambar SD. Molecular characterization of three novel intergenotype norovirus GII recombinant strains from western India. Virus Res. 2010;147(2):242–6. pmid:19941918
  51. 51. Siebenga JJ, Vennema H, Zheng DP, Vinje J, Lee BE, Pang XL, et al. Norovirus illness is a global problem: emergence and spread of norovirus GII.4 variants, 2001–2007. J Infect Dis. 2009;200(5):802–12. pmid:19627248
  52. 52. Bok K, Abente EJ, Realpe-Quintero M, Mitra T, Sosnovtsev SV, Kapikian AZ, et al. Evolutionary dynamics of GII.4 noroviruses over a 34-year period. J Virol. 2009;83(22):11890–901. pmid:19759138
  53. 53. Pang XL, Preiksaitis JK, Wong S, Li V, Lee BE. Influence of novel norovirus GII.4 variants on gastroenteritis outbreak dynamics in Alberta and the Northern Territories, Canada between 2000 and 2008. PLoS One. 2010;5(7):e11599. pmid:20661286
  54. 54. Lindesmith LC, Donaldson EF, Lobue AD, Cannon JL, Zheng DP, Vinje J, et al. Mechanisms of GII.4 norovirus persistence in human populations. PLoS Med. 2008;5(2):e31. pmid:18271619
  55. 55. Lindesmith L, Moe C, Marionneau S, Ruvoen N, Jiang X, Lindblad L, et al. Human susceptibility and resistance to Norwalk virus infection. Nat Med. 2003;9(5):548–53. pmid:12692541
  56. 56. Huang P, Farkas T, Zhong W, Tan M, Thornton S, Morrow AL, et al. Norovirus and histo-blood group antigens: demonstration of a wide spectrum of strain specificities and classification of two major binding groups among multiple binding patterns. J Virol. 2005;79(11):6714–22. pmid:15890909
  57. 57. Shirato H. Norovirus and histo-blood group antigens. Jpn J Infect Dis. 2011;64(2):95–103. pmid:21519121
  58. 58. Nordgren J, Kindberg E, Lindgren PE, Matussek A, Svensson L. Norovirus gastroenteritis outbreak with a secretor-independent susceptibility pattern, Sweden. Emerg Infect Dis. 2010;16(1):81–7. pmid:20031047
  59. 59. Bucardo F, Nordgren J, Carlsson B, Kindberg E, Paniagua M, Mollby R, et al. Asymptomatic norovirus infections in Nicaraguan children and its association with viral properties and histo-blood group antigens. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2010;29(10):934–9. pmid:20657344
  60. 60. Rockx BH, Vennema H, Hoebe CJ, Duizer E, Koopmans MP. Association of histo-blood group antigens and susceptibility to norovirus infections. J Infect Dis. 2005;191(5):749–54. pmid:15688291
  61. 61. Carlsson B, Kindberg E, Buesa J, Rydell GE, Lidon MF, Montava R, et al. The G428A nonsense mutation in FUT2 provides strong but not absolute protection against symptomatic GII.4 Norovirus infection. PLoS One. 2009;4(5):e5593. pmid:19440360
  62. 62. Thorven M, Grahn A, Hedlund KO, Johansson H, Wahlfrid C, Larson G, et al. A homozygous nonsense mutation (428G—>A) in the human secretor (FUT2) gene provides resistance to symptomatic norovirus (GGII) infections. J Virol. 2005;79(24):15351–5. pmid:16306606