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Strain-Specific Virolysis Patterns of Human Noroviruses in Response to Alcohols

Alcohol-based hand sanitizers are widely used to disinfect hands to prevent the spread of pathogens including noroviruses. Alcohols inactivate norovirus by destruction of the viral capsid, resulting in the leakage of viral RNA (virolysis). Since conflicting results have been reported on the suscepti...

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Autores principales: Park, Geun Woo, Collins, Nikail, Barclay, Leslie, Hu, Liya, Prasad, B. V. Venkataram, Lopman, Benjamin A., Vinjé, Jan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4919085/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27337036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157787
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author Park, Geun Woo
Collins, Nikail
Barclay, Leslie
Hu, Liya
Prasad, B. V. Venkataram
Lopman, Benjamin A.
Vinjé, Jan
author_facet Park, Geun Woo
Collins, Nikail
Barclay, Leslie
Hu, Liya
Prasad, B. V. Venkataram
Lopman, Benjamin A.
Vinjé, Jan
author_sort Park, Geun Woo
collection PubMed
description Alcohol-based hand sanitizers are widely used to disinfect hands to prevent the spread of pathogens including noroviruses. Alcohols inactivate norovirus by destruction of the viral capsid, resulting in the leakage of viral RNA (virolysis). Since conflicting results have been reported on the susceptibility of human noroviruses against alcohols, we exposed a panel of 30 human norovirus strains (14 GI and 16 GII strains) to different concentrations (50%, 70%, 90%) of ethanol and isopropanol and tested the viral RNA titer by RT-qPCR. Viral RNA titers of 10 (71.4%), 14 (100%), 3 (21.4%) and 7 (50%) of the 14 GI strains were reduced by > 1 log(10) RNA copies/ml after exposure to 70% and 90% ethanol, and 70% and 90% isopropanol, respectively. RNA titers of 6 of the 7 non-GII 4 strains remained unaffected after alcohol exposure. Compared to GII strains, GI strains were more susceptible to ethanol than to isopropanol. At 90%, both alcohols reduced RNA titers of 8 of the 9 GII.4 strains by ≥ 1 log(10) RNA copies/ml. After exposure to 70% ethanol, RNA titers of GII.4 Den Haag and Sydney strains decreased by ≥ 1.9 log(10), whereas RNA reductions for GII.4 New Orleans strains were < 0.5 log(10). To explain these differences, we sequenced the complete capsid gene of the 9 GII.4 strains and identified 17 amino acid substitutions in the P2 region among the 3 GII.4 variant viruses. When comparing with an additional set of 200 GII.4 VP1 sequences, only S310 and P396 were present in all GII.4 New Orleans viruses but not in the ethanol-sensitive GII.4 Sydney and GII.4 Den Haag viruses Our data demonstrate that alcohol susceptibility patterns between different norovirus genotypes vary widely and that virolysis data for a single strain or genotype are not representative for all noroviruses.
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spelling pubmed-49190852016-07-08 Strain-Specific Virolysis Patterns of Human Noroviruses in Response to Alcohols Park, Geun Woo Collins, Nikail Barclay, Leslie Hu, Liya Prasad, B. V. Venkataram Lopman, Benjamin A. Vinjé, Jan PLoS One Research Article Alcohol-based hand sanitizers are widely used to disinfect hands to prevent the spread of pathogens including noroviruses. Alcohols inactivate norovirus by destruction of the viral capsid, resulting in the leakage of viral RNA (virolysis). Since conflicting results have been reported on the susceptibility of human noroviruses against alcohols, we exposed a panel of 30 human norovirus strains (14 GI and 16 GII strains) to different concentrations (50%, 70%, 90%) of ethanol and isopropanol and tested the viral RNA titer by RT-qPCR. Viral RNA titers of 10 (71.4%), 14 (100%), 3 (21.4%) and 7 (50%) of the 14 GI strains were reduced by > 1 log(10) RNA copies/ml after exposure to 70% and 90% ethanol, and 70% and 90% isopropanol, respectively. RNA titers of 6 of the 7 non-GII 4 strains remained unaffected after alcohol exposure. Compared to GII strains, GI strains were more susceptible to ethanol than to isopropanol. At 90%, both alcohols reduced RNA titers of 8 of the 9 GII.4 strains by ≥ 1 log(10) RNA copies/ml. After exposure to 70% ethanol, RNA titers of GII.4 Den Haag and Sydney strains decreased by ≥ 1.9 log(10), whereas RNA reductions for GII.4 New Orleans strains were < 0.5 log(10). To explain these differences, we sequenced the complete capsid gene of the 9 GII.4 strains and identified 17 amino acid substitutions in the P2 region among the 3 GII.4 variant viruses. When comparing with an additional set of 200 GII.4 VP1 sequences, only S310 and P396 were present in all GII.4 New Orleans viruses but not in the ethanol-sensitive GII.4 Sydney and GII.4 Den Haag viruses Our data demonstrate that alcohol susceptibility patterns between different norovirus genotypes vary widely and that virolysis data for a single strain or genotype are not representative for all noroviruses. Public Library of Science 2016-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4919085/ /pubmed/27337036 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157787 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Park, Geun Woo
Collins, Nikail
Barclay, Leslie
Hu, Liya
Prasad, B. V. Venkataram
Lopman, Benjamin A.
Vinjé, Jan
Strain-Specific Virolysis Patterns of Human Noroviruses in Response to Alcohols
title Strain-Specific Virolysis Patterns of Human Noroviruses in Response to Alcohols
title_full Strain-Specific Virolysis Patterns of Human Noroviruses in Response to Alcohols
title_fullStr Strain-Specific Virolysis Patterns of Human Noroviruses in Response to Alcohols
title_full_unstemmed Strain-Specific Virolysis Patterns of Human Noroviruses in Response to Alcohols
title_short Strain-Specific Virolysis Patterns of Human Noroviruses in Response to Alcohols
title_sort strain-specific virolysis patterns of human noroviruses in response to alcohols
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4919085/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27337036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157787
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