Mechanisms of inactivation of poliovirus by chlorine dioxide and iodine

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Abstract

Chlorine dioxide and iodine inactivated poliovirus more efficiently at pH 10.0 than at pH 6.0. Sedimentation analyses of viruses inactivated by chlorine dioxide and iodine at pH 10.0 showed that viral RNA separated from the capsids, resulting in the conversion of virions from 156S structures to 80S particles. The RNAs released from both chlorine dioxide- and iodine-inactivated viruses cosedimented with intact 35S viral RNA. Both chlorine dioxide and iodine reacted with the capsid proteins of poliovirus and changed the pI from pH 7.0 to pH 5.8. However, the mechanism of inactivation of poliovirus by chlorine dioxide and iodine were found to differ. Iodine inactivated viruses by impairing their ability to adsorb to HeLa cells, whereas chlorine dioxide-inactivated viruses were able to adsorb, penetrate, and initiate uncoating normally. Sedimentation analysis of extracts of HeLa cells infected with chlorine dioxide-inactivated viruses showed a reduced incorporation of [14C]uridine into new viral RNA. We concluded, then, that chlorine dioxide inactivated poliovirus by reacting with the viral RNA and impairing the ability of the viral genome to act as a template for RNA synthesis.

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Alvarez, M. E., & O’Brien, R. T. (1982). Mechanisms of inactivation of poliovirus by chlorine dioxide and iodine. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 44(5), 1064–1071. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.44.5.1064-1071.1982

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