Chou Ming-Li, Burnouf Thierry, Chang Shun-Pang, Hung Ting-Chun, Lin Chun-Ching, Richardson Christopher D, Lin Liang-Tzung
Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences, College of Medicine, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Graduate Institute of Biomedical Materials and Tissue Engineering, College of Oral Medicine, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan.
PLoS One. 2015 Feb 6;10(2):e0117800. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0117800. eCollection 2015.
Risk of transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) by clinical plasma remains high in countries with a high prevalence of hepatitis C, justifying the implementation of viral inactivation treatments. In this study, we assessed the extent of inactivation of HCV during minipool solvent/detergent (SD; 1% TnBP / 1% Triton X-45) treatment of human plasma. Luciferase-tagged infectious cell culture-derived HCV (HCVcc) particles were used to spike human plasma prior to treatment by SD at 31 ± 0.5°C for 30 min. Samples were taken before and after SD treatment and filtered on a Sep-Pak Plus C18 cartridge to remove the SD agents. Risk of cytotoxicity was assessed by XTT cell viability assay. Viral infectivity was analyzed based on the luciferase signals, 50% tissue culture infectious dose viral titer, and immunofluorescence staining for HCV NS5A protein. Total protein, cholesterol, and triglyceride contents were determined before and after SD treatment and C18 cartridge filtration. Binding analysis, using patient-derived HCV clinical isolates, was also examined to validate the efficacy of the inactivation by SD. SD treatment effectively inactivated HCVcc within 30 min, as demonstrated by the baseline level of reporter signals, total loss of viral infectivity, and absence of viral protein NS5A. SD specifically targeted HCV particles to render them inactive, with essentially no effect on plasma protein content and hemostatic function. More importantly, the efficacy of the SD inactivation method was confirmed against various genotypes of patient-derived HCV clinical isolates and against HCVcc infection of primary human hepatocytes. Therefore, treatment by 1% TnBP / 1% Triton X-45 at 31°C is highly efficient to inactivate HCV in plasma for transfusion, showing its capacity to enhance the safety of therapeutic plasma products. We propose that the methodology used here to study HCV infectivity can be valuable in the validation of viral inactivation and removal processes of human plasma-derived products.
在丙型肝炎高流行国家,临床血浆传播丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)的风险仍然很高,这证明了实施病毒灭活治疗的合理性。在本研究中,我们评估了在小池溶剂/去污剂(SD;1%三丁基磷酸酯/1% Triton X-45)处理人血浆过程中HCV的灭活程度。在31±0.5°C下用SD处理之前,将荧光素酶标记的感染性细胞培养衍生的HCV(HCVcc)颗粒加入人血浆中30分钟。在SD处理前后取样,并在Sep-Pak Plus C18柱上过滤以去除SD试剂。通过XTT细胞活力测定评估细胞毒性风险。基于荧光素酶信号、50%组织培养感染剂量病毒滴度和HCV NS5A蛋白的免疫荧光染色分析病毒感染性。在SD处理和C18柱过滤前后测定总蛋白、胆固醇和甘油三酯含量。还使用患者来源的HCV临床分离株进行结合分析,以验证SD灭活的有效性。如报告信号的基线水平、病毒感染性的完全丧失以及病毒蛋白NS5A的缺失所示,SD处理在30分钟内有效灭活了HCVcc。SD特异性靶向HCV颗粒使其失活,对血浆蛋白含量和止血功能基本无影响。更重要的是,针对患者来源的各种基因型HCV临床分离株以及原发性人肝细胞的HCVcc感染,证实了SD灭活方法的有效性。因此,在31°C下用1%三丁基磷酸酯/1% Triton X-45处理可高效灭活用于输血的血浆中的HCV,显示出其提高治疗性血浆产品安全性的能力。我们认为,这里用于研究HCV感染性的方法在验证人血浆衍生产品的病毒灭活和去除过程中可能很有价值。