2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2011.08.010
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In vitro influence of d/l-lactic acid, sodium chloride and sodium nitrite on the infectivity of feline calicivirus and of ECHO virus as potential surrogates for foodborne viruses

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Cited by 9 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, its effect was eliminated by transforming lactic acid into its sodium salt (sodium lactate) at pH 7.0. This explanation is supported by a similar study in which pretreatment of FCV with 0.3 % D,L-lactic acid solution (pH 3.4-3.5) at 20°C led to 1.3 log 10 reduction in FCV titer (Straube et al 2011). The pH of undiluted raw BGMF in our study was 3.7.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Therefore, its effect was eliminated by transforming lactic acid into its sodium salt (sodium lactate) at pH 7.0. This explanation is supported by a similar study in which pretreatment of FCV with 0.3 % D,L-lactic acid solution (pH 3.4-3.5) at 20°C led to 1.3 log 10 reduction in FCV titer (Straube et al 2011). The pH of undiluted raw BGMF in our study was 3.7.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…The pH of undiluted raw BGMF in our study was 3.7. We hypothesize that the viral capsid proteins are denaturated due to the effects of acid pH on non-enveloped viruses (Rodger et al 1977;Straube et al 2011), thus preventing viral attachment to its host cells.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cell culture based methods can be used to detect some enteric viruses, using a series of concentration and purification steps to elute viruses from the food matrix taking special care to avoid reduction of virus infectivity and such methods were shown to be efficient for detection of some enteroviruses or HAV strains from environmental or food samples (Metcalf et al, 1995;Pintó et al, 2009). However, despite numerous attempts using monolayer or 3-D tissue structures of a variety of cell lines, no reproducible in vitro replication for NoV could be achieved Straube et al, 2011). Recently, the replication of a GII.4 Sydney NoV strain was achieved in B-cells in the presence of histo-blood group antigens expressing enteric bacteria (Jones et al, 2014(Jones et al, , 2015.…”
Section: Detection Of Infected Virusesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Enteric cytopathic human orphan (ECHO) virus, a surrogate for human enteroviruses, also shows a very high resistance against extreme concentrations of sodium chloride. After 7 days of exposure to a 20% sodium chloride solution at 4 °C or 20 °C, no inactivating effect was found (Straube et al 2011 ). In contrast, the infectivity reduction of feline calicivirus (FCV), a surrogate for human noroviruses, correlated with higher sodium chloride concentrations, longer incubation times and higher temperatures.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After 3 h of incubation with sodium chloride concentrations up to 20% at 4 °C or 20 °C, no significant loss of virus infectivity could be detected compared to the PBS control. However, virus titers decreased significantly after 7 days of incubation at higher temperature (20 °C), with stronger reduction by 6%, 12% and 20% sodium chloride as compared to 2% and the PBS control (Straube et al 2011 ). Adding of 0.01%, 0.015% or 0.02% sodium nitrite to a 2% sodium chloride solution showed no effect on infectivity reduction of FCV or ECHO virus (Straube et al 2011 ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%