School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA.
School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA; Nanosystems Engineering Research Center for Nanotechnology-Enabled Water Treatment, Arizona State University, USA.
J Virol Methods. 2022 Nov;309:114610. doi: 10.1016/j.jviromet.2022.114610. Epub 2022 Sep 5.
Inactivation of human respiratory viruses in air and on surfaces is important to control their spread. Exposure to germicidal ultraviolet (UV-C) light damages viral nucleic acid rendering them non-infectious. Most of the recent viral inactivation studies have not considered potential artifacts caused by interactions between UV-C light and culture media used to suspend and deposit virus on surfaces. We show that the reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS and RNS) form when commonly used virus culture media is exposed to 265 nm irradiation from light emitting diodes (LEDs) at UV-C doses (4 or 40 mJ/cm) commonly considered to achieve multiple log-inactivation of virus. Surface viral inactivation values were enhanced from 0.49 to 2.92 log of viruses in DMEM, EMEM or EMEM-F as compared to absence of culture media (only suspended in Tris-buffer). The mechanisms responsible for the enhanced surface inactivate is hypothesized to involve photo-activation of vitamins and dyes present in the culture media, deposited with the virus on surfaces to be disinfected, which produce ROS and RNS. Given the rapidly growing research and commercial markets for UV-C disinfecting devices, there is a need to establish surface disinfecting protocols that avoid viral inactivation enhancement artifacts associated with selection and use of common cell culture media in the presence of UV-C light. This study addresses this weak link in the literature and highlights that inadequate selection of virus suspension media may cause a bias (i.e., over-estimation) for the UV-C dosages required for virus inactivation on surfaces.
空气中和表面的人类呼吸道病毒的失活对于控制其传播非常重要。暴露于杀菌紫外线(UV-C)光会破坏病毒的核酸,使其失去感染力。最近的大多数病毒失活研究都没有考虑到 UV-C 光与用于悬浮和沉积病毒在表面上的培养介质之间相互作用可能引起的潜在假象。我们表明,当常用的病毒培养介质暴露于发光二极管(LED)发出的 265nm 照射时,会形成活性氧和氮物质(ROS 和 RNS),这些物质在通常被认为可以实现病毒多次对数失活的 UV-C 剂量(4 或 40mJ/cm)下形成。与不存在培养介质(仅悬浮在 Tris 缓冲液中)相比,在 DMEM、EMEM 或 EMEM-F 中的表面病毒失活值从 0.49 提高到 2.92 个对数。据推测,增强表面失活的机制涉及到存在于培养介质中的维生素和染料的光激活,这些物质与病毒一起沉积在要消毒的表面上,产生 ROS 和 RNS。鉴于 UV-C 消毒设备的研究和商业市场迅速增长,因此需要建立表面消毒协议,避免与 UV-C 光存在时选择和使用常见细胞培养介质相关的病毒失活增强假象。本研究解决了文献中的这一薄弱环节,并强调了病毒悬浮介质选择不当可能导致表面病毒失活所需的 UV-C 剂量出现偏差(即高估)。