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  4. Inactivation mechanisms of influenza A virus under pH conditions encountered in aerosol particles as revealed by whole-virus HDX-MS
 
research article

Inactivation mechanisms of influenza A virus under pH conditions encountered in aerosol particles as revealed by whole-virus HDX-MS

David, Shannon C.  
•
Vadas, Oscar
•
Glas, Irina
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August 18, 2023
mSphere

Multiple respiratory viruses, including influenza A virus (IAV), can be transmitted via expiratory aerosol particles, and aerosol pH was recently identified as a major factor influencing airborne virus infectivity. Indoors, small exhaled aerosols undergo rapid acidification to pH ~4. IAV is known to be sensitive to mildly acidic conditions encountered within host endosomes; however, it is unknown whether the same mechanisms could mediate viral inactivation within the more acidic aerosol micro-environment. Here, we identified that transient exposure to pH 4 caused IAV inactivation by a two-stage process, with an initial sharp decline in infectious titers mainly attributed to premature attainment of the post-fusion conformation of viral protein haemagglutinin (HA). Protein changes were observed by hydrogen-deuterium exchange coupled to mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) as early as 10 s post-exposure to acidic conditions. Our HDX-MS data are in agreement with other more labor-intensive structural analysis techniques, such as X-ray crystallography, highlighting the ease and usefulness of whole-virus HDX-MS for multiplexed protein analyses, even within enveloped viruses such as IAV. Additionally, virion integrity was partially but irreversibly affected by acidic conditions, with a progressive unfolding of the internal matrix protein 1 (M1) that aligned with a more gradual decline in viral infectivity with time. In contrast, no acid-mediated changes to the genome or lipid envelope were detected. Improved understanding of respiratory virus fate within exhaled aerosols constitutes a global public health priority, and information gained here could aid the development of novel strategies to control the airborne persistence of seasonal and/or pandemic influenza in the future.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1128/msphere.00226-23
Author(s)
David, Shannon C.  
Vadas, Oscar
Glas, Irina
Schaub, Aline  
Luo, Beiping
D'angelo, Giovanni  
Montoya, Jonathan Paz
Bluvshtein, Nir
Hugentobler, Walter
Klein, Liviana K.
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Date Issued

2023-08-18

Published in
mSphere
Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LEV  
LAPI  
RelationURL/DOI

IsSupplementedBy

10.5281/zenodo.8064080

IsSupplementedBy

https://proteomecentral.proteomexchange.org/cgi/GetDataset?ID=PXD037176
Available on Infoscience
August 20, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/199960
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