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Article Dans Une Revue Applied and Environmental Microbiology Année : 2004

Rotavirus virus-like particles as surrogates in Environmental persistence and inactivation studies

Résumé

Virus-like particles (VLPs) with the full-length VP2 and VP6 rotavirus capsid proteins, produced in the baculovirus expression system, have been evaluated as surrogates of human rotavirus in different environmental scenarios. Green fluorescent protein-labeled VLPs (GFP-VLPs) and particles enclosing a heterologous RNA (pseudoviruses), whose stability may be monitored by flow cytometry and antigen capture reverse transcription-PCR, respectively, were used. After 1 month in seawater at 20degreesC, no significant differences were observed between the behaviors of GFP-VLPs and of infectious rotavirus, whereas pseudovirus particles showed a higher decay rate. In the presence of 1 mg of free chlorine (FC)/liter both tracers persisted longer in freshwater at 20degreesC than infectious viruses, whereas in the presence of 0.2 mg of FC/liter no differences were observed between tracers and infectious rotavirus at short contact times. However, from 30 min of contact with FC onward, the decay of infectious rotavirus was higher than that of recombinant particles. The predicted Ct value for a 90% reduction of GFP-VLPs or pseudoviruses induces a 99.99% inactivation of infectious rotavirus. Both tracers were more resistant to UV light irradiation than infectious rotavirus in fresh and marine water. The effect of UV exposure was more pronounced on pseudovirus than in GFP-VLPs. In all types of water, the UV dose to induce a 90% reduction of pseudovirus ensures a 99.99% inactivation of infectious rotavirus. Recombinant virus surrogates open new possibilities for the systematic validation of virus removal practices in actual field situations where pathogenic agents cannot be introduced.

Dates et versions

hal-02678908 , version 1 (31-05-2020)

Identifiants

Citer

Santiago Caballero, F. Xavier Abad, Fabienne Loisy, Françoise S. Le Guyader, Jean Cohen, et al.. Rotavirus virus-like particles as surrogates in Environmental persistence and inactivation studies. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2004, 70 (7), pp.3904-3909. ⟨10.1128/AEM.70.7.3904-3909.2004⟩. ⟨hal-02678908⟩
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