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  4. Unraveling the Inactivation Mechanisms of Human Adenovirus 2 in Sunlight Disinfection: Synergism between Direct and Indirect Pathways
 
research article

Unraveling the Inactivation Mechanisms of Human Adenovirus 2 in Sunlight Disinfection: Synergism between Direct and Indirect Pathways

Shin, Sujin
•
Lee, Yunho
•
Kohn, Tamar  
September 18, 2025
Environmental Science & Technology

Adenovirus (HAdV), a double-stranded DNA virus, exhibits resistance to direct inactivation by UVC and solar UVB radiation in water, owing to its ability to repair UV-induced genome damage using host cellular machinery. In the presence of dissolved organic matter (DOM), however, previous studies have reported unexpectedly rapid sunlight-mediated inactivation, even after accounting for indirect effects mediated by photochemically produced reactive intermediates (PPRIs). Here, we hypothesized that a synergistic interaction between direct and indirect inactivation pathways compromises HAdV2's genome repair capacity, thereby enhancing its overall susceptibility to inactivation. First, we demonstrated that pre-exposure to singlet oxygen (1 O 2), a key PPRI, significantly increased HAdV2's susceptibility to subsequent direct UV inactivation. Using host cells with differing genome repair capacities, we further showed that simultaneous exposure to direct and indirect inactivation pathways reduced HAdV2's genome repair efficiency compared to direct UV alone. Finally, although indirect inactivation caused minimal DNA damage, it impaired the DNA replication efficiency of host cells, likely due to oxidative damage to viral proteins involved in transcription-coupled repair. These findings highlight a critical interplay between direct and indirect inactivation pathways and offer new insights that can aid in optimizing light-based disinfection strategies to enhance the efficacy of water treatment processes targeting adenovirus-contaminated sources.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.5c06149
Author(s)
Shin, Sujin

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

Lee, Yunho

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

Kohn, Tamar  

EPFL

Date Issued

2025-09-18

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Published in
Environmental Science & Technology
Subjects

Sunlight disinfection

•

Human adenovirus

•

Synergism

•

Genome repair

•

Repair-deficient cells

URL
Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LEV  
FunderFunding(s)Grant NumberGrant URL

National Research Foundation of Korea

RS-2023-NR077130

Available on Infoscience
September 19, 2025
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/254228
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