| Literature DB >> 21084494 |
Julie Ann Edgeworth1, Anita Sicilia, Jackie Linehan, Sebastian Brandner, Graham S Jackson, John Collinge.
Abstract
Prions are comprised principally of aggregates of a misfolded host protein and cause fatal transmissible neurodegenerative disorders of mammals, such as variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans and bovine spongiform encephalopathy in cattle. Prions pose significant public health concerns through contamination of blood products and surgical instruments, and can resist conventional hospital sterilization methods. Prion infectivity binds avidly to surgical steel and can efficiently transfer infectivity to a suitable host, and much research has been performed to achieve effective prion decontamination of metal surfaces. Here, we exploit the highly sensitive Standard Steel-Binding Assay (SSBA) to perform a direct comparison of a variety of commercially available decontamination reagents marketed for the removal of prions, alongside conventional sterilization methods. We demonstrate that the efficacy of marketed prion decontamination reagents is highly variable and that the SSBA is able to rapidly evaluate current and future decontamination reagents.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21084494 PMCID: PMC3081234 DOI: 10.1099/vir.0.027201-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Virol ISSN: 0022-1317 Impact factor: 3.891
Fig. 1.PK digestion kinetics of RML- (open circles) and vCJD-infected brain homogenates (closed circles). Following digestion with PK for varying times, samples of RML- or vCJD-infected brain homogenate were subjected to Western blotting and the levels of PrP immunoreactivity were quantified by densitometry. The values were then plotted as a percentage of the starting material with respect to time. Superimposed upon each dataset is a line representing a fit of the data to a double exponential decay.
Both RML- and vCJD-associated PrP displayed double exponential decays when incubated with a fixed concentration of PK
RML-infected brain contained the greater proportion of a highly resistant fraction at 82.7 % compared with 60 % in vCJD. In addition to being more abundant, the slowly degraded fraction associated with RML infection was more resistant to digestion than the equivalent fraction in vCJD brain, being degraded almost three times slower at 0.0004 s −1 compared with 0.0011 s−1 for vCJD.
| Fast phase amplitude | 21.8 | 46.4 |
| Fast phase rate (s−1) | 0.13 | 0.06 |
| Slow phase amplitude | 82.7 | 59.6 |
| Slow phase rate (s−1) | 0.0004 | 0.0011 |
Fig. 2.Comparison of commercial decontamination reagents by SSBA. Data are shown as the percentage of apparent TCIUW units remaining on wire after treatment. The ‘% infectivity remaining’ is calculated as a percentage of the titre of infectivity assayable on wires exposed to 10−2 dilution of RML prion-infected brain homogenate after immersion in PBS for 1 h at room temperature. Data are presented as mean±sem. The sem for autoclaving is zero. Rely+On PI, Prionzyme, 2 M NaOH (the carrier for Prionzyme) decontaminate steel wires to a level beyond detection by the SSBA and therefore a reduction of prion infectivity of at least 8 logs is achieved.
Titration comparisons of RML-infected brain homogenate by standard bioassay, implantation of wires and SSBA
| 10−1 | None | 108.3 | 105.5 | – |
| 10−2 | None | 107.3 | 104.5 | – |
| 10−3 | None | 106.3 | 103.5 | – |
| 10−4 | None | 105.3 | 102.5 | >3.1 |
| 10−5 | None | 104.3 | 101.5 | 0.57±0.05 |
| 10−6* | None | 103.3 | 100.5 | 0.28±0.02 |
| 10−7 | None | 102.3 | – | 0.15±0.02 |
| 10−8† | None | 101.3 | − | 0.12±0.02 |
| 10−9 | None | – | − | 0.04±0.01 |
| 10−10 | None | – | − | 0.0029±0.002 |
| 10−2 | Rely+On PI | – | <100.5 | <0.0029 |
| 10−2 | HAMO 100 (0.8 % v/v) | – | − | 0.2963 |
| 10−2 | HAMO 100 (1.6 % v/v) | – | − | 0.0725 |
| 10−2 | Prionzyme | – | − | <0.0029 |
| 10−2 | 2 M NaOH | – | − | <0.0029 |
| 10−2 | Autoclave at 134 °C | – | − | 0.0325 |
*Limit of detection of RML prion infectivity in tga20 by wire i.c. inoculation.
†Limit of detection of RML prion infectivity in tga20 by conventional i.c. inoculation of brain homogenate.
Bioassay data from tga20 mice inoculated i.c. with 5 mm Steelex monofilament wires (USP4/0), exposed to a serial dilution of RML-infected brain homogenate
Animals inoculated with wires treated with Rely+On PI (as described in Methods) survived to the end point of the experiment (>250 days post-inoculation). Subsequent Western blot and immunohistochemistry (IHC) analysis confirmed no signs of subclinical infection.
| 10−1 | None | 20/20 | 76±1 |
| 10−2 | None | 18/18 | 86±2 |
| 10−3 | None | 18/18 | 85±2 |
| 10−4 | None | 18/18 | 113±9 |
| 10−5 | None | 28/35 | 114±7 |
| 10−6 | None | 4/18 | 157±24 |
| 10−7 | None | 0/19 | >250 |
| 10−8 | None | 0/20 | >250 |
| PBS control | None | 0/20 | >250 |
| 10−1 | Rely+On PI | 0/19 | >250 |
*All clinically affected animals were confirmed prion-infected by Western blot and IHC analysis for the presence of PrPSc.
†Clinically unaffected animals showed no signs of subclinical infection by Western blot or IHC analysis.
‡Variation in experimental group sizes due to intermittent losses for health reasons other than prion infection.