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AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

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materials science

Inactivation of virus in solution by cold atmospheric pressure plasma: Identification of chemical inactivation pathways

Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, Volume 49, No. 20, Article 204001, Year 2016

Cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP) inactivates bacteria and virus through in situ production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS). While the bactericidal and virucidal efficiency of plasmas is well established, there is limited knowledge about the chemistry leading to the pathogen inactivation. This article describes a chemical analysis of the CAP reactive chemistry involved in the inactivation of feline calicivirus. We used a remote radio frequency CAP produced in varying gas mixtures leading to different plasma-induced chemistries. A study of the effects of selected scavengers complemented with positive control measurements of relevant RONS reveal two distinctive pathways based on singlet oxygen and peroxynitrous acid. The first mechanism is favored in the presence of oxygen and the second in the presence of air when a significant pH reduction is induced in the solution by the plasma. Additionally, smaller effects of the H2O2, O3 and produced were also found. Identification of singlet oxygen-mediated 2-imidazolone/2-oxo-His (His +14 Da) - an oxidative modification of His 262 comprising the capsid protein of feline calicivirus links the plasma induced singlet oxygen chemistry to viral inactivation.
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Citations: 129
Authors: 5
Affiliations: 3
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Environmental