Buffer AVL Alone Does Not Inactivate Ebola Virus in a Representative Clinical Sample Type

J Clin Microbiol. 2015 Oct;53(10):3148-54. doi: 10.1128/JCM.01449-15. Epub 2015 Jul 15.

Abstract

Rapid inactivation of Ebola virus (EBOV) is crucial for high-throughput testing of clinical samples in low-resource, outbreak scenarios. The EBOV inactivation efficacy of Buffer AVL (Qiagen) was tested against marmoset serum (EBOV concentration of 1 × 10(8) 50% tissue culture infective dose per milliliter [TCID50 · ml(-1)]) and murine blood (EBOV concentration of 1 × 10(7) TCID50 · ml(-1)) at 4:1 vol/vol buffer/sample ratios. Posttreatment cell culture and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) analysis indicated that treatment with Buffer AVL did not inactivate EBOV in 67% of samples, indicating that Buffer AVL, which is designed for RNA extraction and not virus inactivation, cannot be guaranteed to inactivate EBOV in diagnostic samples. Murine blood samples treated with ethanol (4:1 [vol/vol] ethanol/sample) or heat (60°C for 15 min) also showed no viral inactivation in 67% or 100% of samples, respectively. However, combined Buffer AVL and ethanol or Buffer AVL and heat treatments showed total viral inactivation in 100% of samples tested. The Buffer AVL plus ethanol and Buffer AVL plus heat treatments were also shown not to affect the extraction of PCR quality RNA from EBOV-spiked murine blood samples.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Blood / virology
  • Buffers*
  • Callithrix
  • Disinfectants / pharmacology*
  • Ebolavirus / drug effects*
  • Ebolavirus / physiology*
  • Ethanol*
  • Mice
  • Microbial Viability / drug effects*
  • Virus Inactivation / drug effects*

Substances

  • Buffers
  • Disinfectants
  • Ethanol