| Literature DB >> 27123934 |
Jason Edmonds1, H D Alan Lindquist2, Jonathan Sabol1, Kenneth Martinez3, Sean Shadomy4, Tyler Cymet5, Peter Emanuel1.
Abstract
The release of biological agents, including those which could be used in biowarfare or bioterrorism in large urban areas, has been a concern for governments for nearly three decades. Previous incidents from Sverdlosk and the postal anthrax attack of 2001 have raised questions on the mechanism of spread of Bacillus anthracis spores as an aerosol or contaminant. Prior studies have demonstrated that Bacillus atrophaeus is easily transferred through simulated mail handing, but no reports have demonstrated this ability with Bacillus anthracis spores, which have morphological differences that may affect adhesion properties between spore and formite. In this study, equipment developed to simulate interactions across three generations of envelopes subjected to tumbling and mixing was used to evaluate the potential for cross-contamination of B. anthracis spores in simulated mail handling. In these experiments, we found that the potential for cross-contamination through letter tumbling from one generation to the next varied between generations while the presence of a fluidizer had no statistical impact on the transfer of material. Likewise, the presence or absence of a fluidizer had no statistically significant impact on cross-contamination levels or reaerosolization from letter opening.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27123934 PMCID: PMC4849716 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0152225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow chart of letter tumbling process. Image reproduced from Edmonds et al 2010 [19].
CFU recovery following three generations of Bacillus anthracis Sterne mail tumbling.
| Primary Tumbling | Secondary Tumbling | Tertiary Tumbling | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CFUs (CV | CFUs (CV%) | CFUs (CV%) | |
| BAS Load Envelope | 1.90E+08 (78%) n = 3 | 1.40E+05 (131%) n = 6 | 3.50E+03 (137%) n = 6 |
| Paper Stuffed envelopes | 1.4E+05 (76%) n = 66 | 2.8E+03 (194%) n = 138 | 2.1E+03 (183%) n = 144 |
| BAS Fluidized Load Envelope | 1.20E+08 (156%) n = 3 | 3.20E+04 (139%) n = 6 | 1.40E+03 (41%) n = 6 |
| Paper Stuffed envelopes | 3.5E+05 (76%) n = 66 | 5.4E+03 (146%) n = 138 | 1.1E+03 (221%) n = 144 |
*Coefficient of Variation
Fig 2Log Reduction of spore concentration of payload envelopes.
Arrows indicate coefficient of variation.
Fig 3Post-tumbling spore concentration of cross-contaminated envelopes compared to payload envelopes.
Arrows indicate coefficient of variation.