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Temperature Dependent Depuration of Norovirus GII and Tulane Virus from Oysters (Crassostrea gigas).

Sarah M StoppelArne DuinkerMamata KhatriBjørn Tore LunestadMette Myrmel
Published in: Food and environmental virology (2023)
Raw oysters are considered a culinary delicacy but are frequently the culprit in food-borne norovirus (NoV) infections. As commercial depuration procedures are currently unable to efficiently eliminate NoV from oysters, an optimisation of the process should be considered. This study addresses the ability of elevated water temperatures to enhance the elimination of NoV and Tulane virus (TuV) from Pacific oysters (Crassostrea gigas). Both viruses were experimentally bioaccumulated in oysters, which were thereafter depurated at 12 °C and 17 °C for 4 weeks. Infectious TuV and viral RNA were monitored weekly for 28 days by TCID 50 and (PMAxx-) RT-qPCR, respectively. TuV RNA was more persistent than NoV and decreased by < 0.5 log 10 after 14 days, while NoV reductions were already > 1.0 log 10 at this time. For RT-qPCR there was no detectable benefit of elevated water temperatures or PMAxx for either virus (p > 0.05). TuV TCID 50 decreased steadily, and reductions were significantly different between the two temperatures (p < 0.001). This was most evident on days 14 and 21 when reductions at 17 °C were 1.3-1.7 log 10 higher than at 12 °C. After 3 weeks, reductions > 3.0 log 10 were observed at 17 °C, while at 12 °C reductions did not exceed 1.9 log 10 . The length of depuration also had an influence on virus numbers. TuV reductions increased from < 1.0 log 10 after seven days to > 4.0 log 10 after 4 weeks. This implies that an extension of the depuration period to more than seven days, possibly in combination with elevated water temperatures, may be beneficial for the inactivation and removal of viral pathogens.
Keyphrases
  • gestational age
  • multidrug resistant
  • preterm birth