| Literature DB >> 31336640 |
Charles P Gerba1, Walter Q Betancourt2.
Abstract
Detection of waterborne enteric viruses is an essential tool in assessing the risk of waterborne transmission. Cell culture is considered a gold standard for detection of these viruses. However, it is important to recognize the uncertainty and limitations of enteric virus detection in cell culture. Cell culture cannot support replication of all virus types and strains, and numerous factors control the efficacy of specific virus detection assays, including chemical additives, cell culture passage number, and sequential passage of a sample in cell culture. These factors can result in a 2- to 100-fold underestimation of virus infectivity. Molecular methods reduce the time for detection of viruses and are useful for detection of those that do not produce cytopathogenic effects. The usefulness of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to access virus infectivity has been demonstrated for only a limited number of enteric viruses and is limited by an understanding of the mechanism of virus inactivation. All of these issues are important to consider when assessing waterborne infectious viruses and expected goals on virus reductions needed for recycled water. The use of safety factors to account for this may be useful to ensure that the risks in drinking water and recycled water for potable reuse are minimized.Entities:
Keywords: cell culture; infectivity; molecular methods; reuse; virus; wastewater
Year: 2019 PMID: 31336640 PMCID: PMC6789576 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens8030107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Susceptibilities of cell culture lines most commonly used for isolation and detection of waterborne enteric viruses.
| Cell Line | ADENO | CV-A | CV-B | ECHO | PV | REO | ROTAV | ASTROV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human Embryonic Kidney | ++ | + | + | + | + | |||
| A549 | ++++ | |||||||
| Buffalo Green | + | + | ++++ | ++ | +++ | +++ | ||
| Human rhabdomyosarcoma | - | ++ | - | ++ | ++ | |||
| Caco-2 * | + | + | ++ | ? | + | + | + | + |
| PLC/PRC/5 ** | ++ | ++ | ++? | |||||
| HEL-299 *** | ++ | ++ | ++ | - | + | |||
| RD | + | ++ | - | ++ | + | + |
Note: The number of + signs indicate the relative degree of replication of the virus in the specific cell line. A “–“sign indicates no replication. *[23] **[24,25] ***[26] ADENO: Adenovirus; CV-A: Coxsackievirus A; CV-B: Coxsackievirus B; ECHO: Echovirus; PV: Poliovirus; REO: Reovirus, ROTAV: Rotavirus; ASTROV: Astrovirus, RD: Rhabdomyosarcoma titers in cell culture. Thus, it should be recognized that much of our information on viruses in water and the effectiveness of treatment processes comes from a very limited group of enteroviruses. The question mark indicates potential replication of the virus in the corresponding cell line.
Factors that influence the infectivity of viruses in cell culture.
| Factor | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|
| Type of virus | Not all viruses can be grown in cell culture | [ |
| Type of cell line | Not all viruses can be grown in the same cell culture | [ |
| Number of times cell line has been passed in the laboratory | Cells may lose their sensitivity to virus infectivity after prolong passage in the laboratory; this may be virus-specific | [ |
| Laboratory grown versus naturally occurring viruses | Laboratory grown viruses have been adapted for rapid growth and infectivity in cell culture. | [ |
| Effectiveness of host cell repair enzymes | Host cell repair enzymes can repair damage to double-stranded DNA viruses after exposure to UV light. This may vary with cell line | [ |
| Observation time for production of CPE | This may take days to weeks | [ |
Most common methods used to assess viral infectivity in cell culture from environmental samples.
| Method | Reference |
|---|---|
| Plaque form unit (PFU) | [ |
| Most probable number by cytopathogenic effects (MPN) | [ |
| Tissue culture infectious dose 50% (TCID50) | [ |
| Integrated Cell Culture polymerase chain reaction (ICC-PCR) | [ |
| Detection of messenger RNA | [ |
Methods used to enhance cell culture infectivity to increase in virus numbers quantified.
| Method | Virus | Increase in titer | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-iodo-2’-deoxyuridine | enteroviruses | Range of 0.7- to 3.3-fold increase in titer depending on virus type | [ |
| Suspended cell culture agar method | Various enterovirus, wastewater and river water, and filtered water | Average 5.6-fold by plaque-forming unit method; range 0.1 to 23.3; 10 to 100 fold with BGM cells with polluted river water | [ |
| Double agar overlay | Various enteroviruses and sewage isolates | 7.7- to 12-fold over monolayer depending upon the virus | [ |
| Rocking | Poliovirus 1 | 16% to 23% more plaques for rocked flasks. Increases rate of virus adsorption to cells | [ |
| Adsorption time | Poliovirus 1 | Maximum at 2 hours: ~2.5-fold from 30 min to 2 hrs for rocked flasks | [ |
| Soluble proteins | Poliovirus 1 | 80% reduction of plaques in the presence of 3% beef extract compare to phosphate-buffered saline | [ |
| Size of inoculum | Poliovirus 1 | Inoculum of greater than one ml/25 cm2 resulted in decreasing numbers of plaques and MPN | [ |
| Flask vs. roller bottlePlaques vs. CPE | Poliovirus 1 | Greater sensitivity when detecting low levels of virus in a sample | [ |
| Sequential passage | Poliovirus 1 | Titer can increase by 10- to 100-fold | [ |