Affiliation:
1. Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, U.S. Food and Drug Administration , 6502 S. Archer Rd, Bedford Park, IL 60501 , USA
Abstract
Abstract
Aims
Viral diseases can be indirectly transmitted by contaminated non-food contact surfaces to final food products by cross-contamination. The interaction of metal surfaces and viruses, MS2 coliphage and hepatitis A virus (HAV), was investigated for strategy development in decreasing this transmission risk.
Methods and results
MS2 deposited onto stainless-steel surface was stable but inactivated at 0.95 log10 PFU min−1 on 99.9% copper surfaces. Greater copper-inactivation of MS2 was observed in (a) simple media (phosphate buffered saline, PBS) than protein-rich media (beef extract buffer), and (b) acidic than pH ≥ 6.8 environments. Among food matrices (strawberry juices and beef broth), the greatest MS2 inactivation by copper occurred in filtered strawberry juice at pH 3.5. At a reduction of 0.17 log10 PFU min−1, HAV survived longer than MS2 on copper by FRhK-4 cell infectivity assay.
Conclusions
The inactivation of virus on copper surfaces was greater in acidic viral surrounding environments and in simple PBS medium. In the same 99% PBS medium, MS2 may not be an appropriate surrogate for HAV when assessing viral inactivation on copper surfaces.
Funder
U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Biotechnology