Ge. Greening et al., Survival of poliovirus in New Zealand green-lipped mussels, Perna canaliculus, on refrigerated and frozen storage, J FOOD PROT, 64(6), 2001, pp. 881-884
Poliovirus survival in live and frozen mussels during storage was assessed
by both viral culture and molecular methods. Live New Zealand green-lipped
mussels were incubated overnight at 20 degreesC in an aerated tank of filte
red seawater seeded with the poliovirus 2 (PV2) vaccine strain. An extracti
on and concentration method that preserved viral infectivity was used to re
cover PV2 taken up by the mussels at day 0, at day 2 after storage at 4 deg
reesC, and at days 7, 14, and 28 after storage at -20 degreesC. This method
allowed both culture and molecular analysis to be carried out. Presence of
intact PV2 in each batch of mussels was determined by a pan-enterovirus sp
ecific reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and confirm
ed by dot-blot hybridization, Survival of infectious PV2 was determined by
the monolayer plaque assay. After 48 h at 4 degreesC, infectious PV2 levels
were 81% of the original level detected in the mussels. Infective virus le
vels then declined to 66, 53, and 44% after storage at -20 degreesC for 7,
14, and 28 days, respectively. Generic RT-PCR methods were 10 times more se
nsitive than cell culture techniques for virus detection but did not give i
nformation on virus infectivity. The survival of infectious pathogenic viru
ses in fresh and frozen mussels on storage constitutes a potential health r
isk and so is a major concern for public health authorities.