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Virology

Influenza Virus Inactivation for Studies of Antigenicity and Phenotypic Neuraminidase Inhibitor Resistance Profiling

Marcel Jonges, Wai Ming Liu, Erhard van der Vries, Ronald Jacobi, Inge Pronk, Claire Boog, Marion Koopmans, Adam Meijer, Ernst Soethout
Marcel Jonges
1National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Center for Infectious Disease Control, Laboratory for Infectious Diseases and Screening, Bilthoven, Netherlands
3Erasmus Medical Center, Department of Virology, Rotterdam, Netherlands
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  • For correspondence: marcel.jonges@rivm.nl
Wai Ming Liu
2Netherlands Vaccine Institute, Bilthoven, Netherlands
4Leiden University Medical Center, Department of Medical Microbiology, Leiden, Netherlands
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Erhard van der Vries
3Erasmus Medical Center, Department of Virology, Rotterdam, Netherlands
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Ronald Jacobi
2Netherlands Vaccine Institute, Bilthoven, Netherlands
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Inge Pronk
2Netherlands Vaccine Institute, Bilthoven, Netherlands
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Claire Boog
2Netherlands Vaccine Institute, Bilthoven, Netherlands
5Utrecht University, Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Utrecht, Netherlands
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Marion Koopmans
1National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Center for Infectious Disease Control, Laboratory for Infectious Diseases and Screening, Bilthoven, Netherlands
3Erasmus Medical Center, Department of Virology, Rotterdam, Netherlands
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Adam Meijer
1National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Center for Infectious Disease Control, Laboratory for Infectious Diseases and Screening, Bilthoven, Netherlands
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Ernst Soethout
2Netherlands Vaccine Institute, Bilthoven, Netherlands
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DOI: 10.1128/JCM.02045-09
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ABSTRACT

Introduction of a new influenza virus in humans urges quick analysis of its virological and immunological characteristics to determine the impact on public health and to develop protective measures for the human population. At present, however, the necessity of executing pandemic influenza virus research under biosafety level 3 (BSL-3) high-containment conditions severely hampers timely characterization of such viruses. We tested heat, formalin, Triton X-100, and β-propiolactone treatments for their potencies in inactivating human influenza A(H3N2) and avian A(H7N3) viruses, as well as seasonal and pandemic A(H1N1) virus isolates, while allowing the specimens to retain their virological and immunological properties. Successful heat inactivation coincided with the loss of hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) characteristics, and β-propiolactone inactivation reduced the hemagglutination titer and NA activity of the human influenza virus 10-fold or more. Although Triton X-100 treatment resulted in inconsistent HA activity, the NA activities in culture supernatants were enhanced consistently. Nonetheless, formalin treatment permitted the best retention of HA and NA properties. Triton X-100 treatment proved to be the easiest-to-use influenza virus inactivation protocol for application in combination with phenotypic NA inhibitor susceptibility assays, while formalin treatment preserved B-cell and T-cell epitope antigenicity, allowing the detection of both humoral and cellular immune responses. In conclusion, we demonstrated successful influenza virus characterization using formalin- and Triton X-100-inactivated virus samples. Application of these inactivation protocols limits work under BSL-3 conditions to virus culture, thus enabling more timely determination of public health impact and development of protective measures when a new influenza virus, e.g., pandemic A(H1N1)v virus, is introduced in humans.

  • Copyright © 2010 American Society for Microbiology
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Influenza Virus Inactivation for Studies of Antigenicity and Phenotypic Neuraminidase Inhibitor Resistance Profiling
Marcel Jonges, Wai Ming Liu, Erhard van der Vries, Ronald Jacobi, Inge Pronk, Claire Boog, Marion Koopmans, Adam Meijer, Ernst Soethout
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Feb 2010, 48 (3) 928-940; DOI: 10.1128/JCM.02045-09

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Influenza Virus Inactivation for Studies of Antigenicity and Phenotypic Neuraminidase Inhibitor Resistance Profiling
Marcel Jonges, Wai Ming Liu, Erhard van der Vries, Ronald Jacobi, Inge Pronk, Claire Boog, Marion Koopmans, Adam Meijer, Ernst Soethout
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Feb 2010, 48 (3) 928-940; DOI: 10.1128/JCM.02045-09
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KEYWORDS

Containment of Biohazards
Disinfection
influenza A virus
Influenza, Human
Occupational Exposure
Virus Inactivation

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