4.7 Article

Adsorption of bacteriophages on polypropylene labware affects the reproducibility of phage research

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-86571-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Centre within SONATA BIS grant [2017/26/E/ST4/00041]
  2. European Union [754462]

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Hydrophobicity plays a critical role in the adsorption of molecules and objects on surfaces, with a wetting angle threshold of around 95 degrees. The addition of surfactant and plasma treatment can reduce virus adsorption, which is crucial for daily use of plastic containers in bio-laboratories and related research.
Hydrophobicity is one of the most critical factors governing the adsorption of molecules and objects, such as virions, on surfaces. Even moderate change of wetting angle of plastic surfaces causes a drastic decrease ranging from 2 to 5 logs of the viruses (e.g., T4 phage) in the suspension due to adsorption on polymer vials' walls. The effect varies immensely in seemingly identical containers but purchased from different vendors. Comparison of glass, polyethylene, polypropylene, and polystyrene containers revealed a threshold in the wetting angle of around 95 degrees: virions adsorb on the surface of more hydrophobic containers, while in more hydrophilic vials, phage suspensions are stable. The polypropylene surface of the Eppendorf-type and Falcon-type can accommodate from around 10(8) PFU/ml to around 10(10) PFU/ml from the suspension. The adsorption onto the container's wall might result in complete scavenging of virions from the bulk. We developed two methods to overcome this issue. The addition of surfactant Tween20 and/or plasma treatment provides a remedy by modulating surface wettability and inhibiting virions' adsorption. Plastic containers are essential consumables in the daily use of many bio-laboratories. Thus, this is important not only for phage-related research (e.g., the use of phage therapies as an alternative for antibiotics) but also for data comparison and reproducibility in the field of biochemistry and virology.

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