4.5 Article

Chemical Inactivation of Prions Is Altered by Binding to the Soil Mineral Montmorillonite

Journal

ACS INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 859-870

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.0c00860

Keywords

prion; scrapie; chronic wasting disease; clay; aluminosilicate; decontamination

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS060034]
  2. Michigan Department of Natural Resources [CWD020-26]

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Environmental routes play a critical role in spreading chronic wasting disease and scrapie. Prions can persist in soil and remain infectious for years. Sodium hydroxide and sodium hypochlorite are effective for prion deactivation, but the presence of montmorillonite may impact the efficacy of hypochlorite.
Environmental routes of transmission contribute to the spread of the prion diseases chronic wasting disease of deer and elk and scrapie of sheep and goats. Prions can persist in soils and other environmental matrices and remain infectious for years. Prions bind avidly to the common soil mineral montmorillonite, and such binding can dramatically increase oral disease transmission. Decontamination of soil in captive facilities and natural habitats requires inactivation agents that are effective when prions are bound to soil microparticles. Here, we investigate the inactivation of free and montmorillonite-bound prions with sodium hydroxide, acidic pH, Environ LpH, and sodium hypochlorite. Immunoblotting and bioassays confirm that sodium hydroxide and sodium hypochlorite are effective for prion deactivation, although montmorillonite appears to reduce the efficacy of hypochlorite. Acidic conditions slightly reduce prion infectivity, and the acidic phenolic disinfectant Environ LpH produces slight reductions in infectivity and immunoreactivity. The extent to which the association with montmorillonite protects prions from chemical inactivation appears influenced by the effect of chemical agents on the clay structure and surface pH. When clay morphology remains relatively unaltered, as when exposed to hypochlorite, montmorillonite-bound prions appear to be protected from inactivation. In contrast, when the clay structure is substantially transformed, as when exposed to high concentrations of sodium hydroxide, the attachment to montmorillonite does not slow degradation. A reduction in surface pH appears to cause slight disruptions in clay structure, which enhances degradation under these conditions. We expect our findings will aid the development of remediation approaches for successful decontamination of prion-contaminated sites.

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