Abstract
Minimizing the spread of viruses in the environment is the first defence line when fighting outbreaks and pandemics, but the current COVID-19 pandemic demonstrates how difficult this is on a global scale, particularly in a sustainable and environmentally friendly way. Here we introduce and develop a sustainable and biodegradable antiviral filtration membrane composed of amyloid nanofibrils made from food-grade milk proteins and iron oxyhydroxide nanoparticles synthesized in situ from iron salts by simple pH tuning. Thus, all the membrane components are made of environmentally friendly, non-toxic and widely available materials. The membrane has outstanding efficacy against a broad range of viruses, which include enveloped, non-enveloped, airborne and waterborne viruses, such as SARS-CoV-2, H1N1 (the influenza A virus strain responsible for the swine flu pandemic in 2009) and enterovirus 71 (a non-enveloped virus resistant to harsh conditions, such as highly acidic pH), which highlights a possible role in fighting the current and future viral outbreaks and pandemics.
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Main
The current ongoing COVID-19 pandemic illustrates the importance of valid therapeutic tools1, but also the notable lack of technologies capable of fighting the spread of viruses in the environment. Many viruses diffuse and transmit in the environment in water, some in their bulk form (waterborne viruses)2,3,4 and others in small droplets suspended in the air (airborne viruses)5,6,7,8,9. A key defence strategy against infectious diseases is always the prevention of pathogen transmission from an infected person to an uninfected one. This is achieved by using masks, gloves, physical barriers and disinfection, which introduces other challenges on a global scale, such as achieving the goal in a fully sustainable and environmentally friendly way10,11,12.
In particular, the COVID-19 pandemic revealed the paradox that, although both technological and scientific knowledge are available to develop a vaccine within the record time of less than a year13,14, there is still a lack of preparedness to fight the rapid spread of new viruses until such vaccines are developed and a substantial portion of the population is vaccinated15. Without the appropriate readiness, viruses spread widely and rapidly and, eventually, new virus strains emerge via mutations16,17, which could potentially confer resistance to vaccines that target the original strain or increase the virulence of the virus, and possibly lead to an endless vicious cycle. Viruses can spread through many different routes, but mostly through fomites18, small water droplets5,6,7,8,9 and bulk water bodies (which include wastewater)2,3,4. Proper hand hygiene serves as a very effective practice against the spread of infections through fomites19. In all the other cases, however, virus inactivation must be tackled in the hosting fluid, and the overarching strategy is then to target the virus in its surrounding aqueous environment, may this be in the form of microscopic suspended water droplets or bulk waters. For airborne viruses, suitable face masks, although effective, pose the risk of further dissemination of the viruses when improperly handled20 and/or disposed21,22. Additionally, the generated plastic waste eventually emerges as a parallel environmental problem, especially in times of pandemics10,11,12. For waterborne viruses, and despite decades-long technological developments, contaminated drinking water is still responsible for 500,000 annual deaths, of which more than half occur in children under five years of age23. Non-enveloped enteric viruses, such as enteroviruses, adenoviruses and rotaviruses, can cause gastrointestinal infections with diseases such as diarrhoea and dysentery. It is estimated that ~40% of often-fatal childhood diarrhoea in developing countries is connected to viral agents24. Non-enveloped viruses can persist in water bodies for long periods of time25 and can resist even some of the harshest treatments26,27. This challenge is not only exclusive to unfavoured communities, but extends also to countries with state-of-the-art water and wastewater treatment facilities2. Furthermore, even enveloped viruses, such as influenza viruses and coronaviruses, which were often regarded as unstable in water environments, have now been shown to remain highly infective for long times in bulk water bodies28,29: SARS-CoV-2, for example, can retain its infectivity for longer than seven days in tap water and wastewater at room temperature30.
Therefore, the development of efficient barriers against the spread of viruses via diffusing environmental fluids becomes crucial if global contamination is to be prevented. In spite of decades of scientific and technological development, no existing technology can universally eliminate viruses from water, unless it is extremely energy intensive (for example, reverse osmosis)31 or starts to pose the risk of toxicity towards humans and the environment (for example, silver-based technologies)32,33. All these limitations render the existing technologies obsolete facing global challenges such as pandemics.
To address such a challenge, we developed an antiviral membrane trap composed of amyloid nanofibrils obtained from a food-grade milk protein, β-lactoglobulin (BLG), modified in situ with iron oxyhydroxide nanoparticles (NPs) (Fig. 1a). The conversion of BLG monomers into a network of amyloid fibrils (AFs) is a straightforward process achieved by simply lowering the pH to 2.0 with simultaneous heating up to 90 °C; afterwards, the iron oxyhydroxide NPs are precipitated directly on the formed network of AFs by raising the pH in the presence of FeCl3·6H2O. Figure 1b shows a schematic of the process; the detailed chemical analysis and composition of the iron NPs as studied by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) reveals the presence of both iron(ii) and iron(iii) oxide and iron chloride species that coexist with the majority of iron oxyhydroxide NPs (Supplementary Fig. 1). By depositing the produced material on a porous solid support, we obtained a filtration membrane composed of an intricate network of BLG AFs decorated by Fe oxyhydroxide NPs a few nanometres in size (in what follows, the hybrid membrane is simply referred to as BLG AF–Fe and the decorating iron nanoparticles as Fe NPs; BLG AF–Fe hybrids refer instead to the solution precursor). The resulting membrane is thus composed of food-grade components and shows no toxicity on experimentally treated cell lines, as demonstrated by cytotoxicity tests (Supplementary Fig. 2). The general structure of the membrane can be clearly observed by cryogenic scanning electron microscopy (cryo-SEM) (Fig. 1c) on a fracture plane through the inner structure of the fully hydrated filter: controlled etching lowers the level of water and enhances the visibility of the BLG AF–Fe hybrids. Alternatively, Fe NPs that decorate the AF can be visualized by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) (Fig. 1d) on samples prepared using a fivefold lower Fe concentration to allow the resolution of single NPs. Finally, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) micrographs (Fig. 1e) of fully dried membranes reveal, in high-contrast images, the dense packing of the Fe NPs on the surface of AFs. It is important to mention that the observed difference in the Fe NP density between the cryo-SEM (Fig. 1c) and the SEM (Fig. 1e) micrographs is due to the shrinkage of the sample during preparation and drying.
Performance of membranes on enveloped viruses
We first tested this filtration membrane trap by filtering water that contained three different types of enveloped viruses: (1) Φ6, an enveloped bacteriophage that infects Pseudomonas syringae bacteria and is often used as a surrogate of human enveloped viruses34, (2) H1N1, an influenza A virus strain responsible for the swine flu pandemic in 200935 and (3) SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus strain responsible for the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The membrane showed an efficiency of more than six orders of magnitude reduction in infectivity for all three viruses (Fig. 2). The infectious virus concentrations went from ~106 PFU ml−1 before filtration to below the detection limit after filtration for all three viruses. No remarkable effect on the infectivity of the viruses was observed when filtering the viruses through the cellulose support or the BLG AF alone, which suggests a unique synergetic effect of the BLG AF–Fe membranes. The filter has a capacity of ~7 × 103 \({\mathrm{PFU}}\, {\mathrm{mg}}_{{\mathrm{BLG}}\,{\mathrm{AF - Fe}}}^{ - 1}\) (Supplementary Fig. 4), as determined both by repeated cycles of filtration and by varying the total volume of the BLG AF–Fe hybrid solution used to prepare the final membrane.
By quantifying the viral genomes, which indicate the total number of viruses (both infectious and non-infectious), before and after filtration (Fig. 2), we observed that most of the viruses were retained on the membrane material. Still, for H1N1 and SARS-CoV-2, a detectable amount of genomes passed through the filter. It is, however, important to reiterate that the infective viruses in the filtrate were below the detection limit for both viruses. Even in the conservative assumption that the concentration of the infective virus in the filtrate is equal to the detection limit, we still observed a remarkable decrease in the ratio of infective to total viruses after filtration (Supplementary Fig. 5). These results suggest that the membrane not only retains the virus, but also strongly inactivates it.
Further assessment of the virucidal effect of the membrane was conducted by attempting to recover the Φ6 viruses retained on the membrane filter. This was done by incubating the membrane material used for Φ6 filtration in a beef buffer of pH 9.3—beef buffer has often been used to recover viruses adsorbed to iron oxides36. Keeping in mind the challenges of an efficient recovery of adsorbed viruses and potential damage to the virus in that process, we still observed a pronounced decrease in the ratio of infective to total viruses from 0.05 for the filtered solution to as low as 8.8 × 10−4 of the recovered viruses (Supplementary Fig. 6). This observation provides additional evidence that the viruses not only adsorb to the membrane but also are mostly inactivated.
Inactivation mechanisms
To further investigate the mechanism by which the BLG AF–Fe membrane eliminates viruses, we ran experiments in which the viruses were incubated with a suspension of BLG AF–Fe hybrids in PBS buffer for one hour followed by assessing the infectivity of the viruses. No infective Φ6 viruses were detected in the solution at the end of the incubation time (Fig. 3a). These results show that virus elimination during filtration cannot be attributed to simple retention on the filter material due to small pore sizes, that is, by size exclusion: indeed, no change in the Φ6 infectivity was observed in control experiments when the viruses were incubated with BLG AF or Fe NPs alone. The reduction in infective viruses in solution started to become noticeable when the viruses were incubated with BLG monomer–Fe; still it was neither as effective nor as reproducible as incubation with BLG AF–Fe hybrids. These results were further supported by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images of the Φ6 viruses alone (Fig. 3b), Φ6 incubated with BLG AF–Fe hybrids pre-adsorbed on carbon films (Fig. 3c) and Φ6 incubated with BLG AF–Fe hybrids imaged using cryo-TEM. Figure 3b shows a high concentration of spherical and intact Φ6 virions. The top image of Fig. 3c shows that BLG AF–Fe is densely covered with Φ6 phages. It is important to note that the heavy metal staining used to produce contrast in the TEM image stabilizes single molecules, fibrils and virus particles adsorbed on the grid; bulky pieces of BLG AF–Fe are, however, too large and the stabilizing effect of the stain is not sufficient due to their spatial hydrogel nature and thus such staining cannot stop them from shrinking during the air-drying procedure after staining. The viruses attached at the surface of BLG AF–Fe hybrids (Fig. 3c) appear to be elongated in a direction perpendicular to the surface, which suggests that such elongation was driven by the shrinkage of the membrane on drying and indicates a very strong interaction between the viruses and the BLG AF–Fe hybrids. A weak interaction would have probably resulted in the release of the viruses from the surface of BLG AF–Fe hybrids on washing and drying the samples. Such strong interactions could be sufficient to inactivate the viruses, as previously observed for Φ6 viruses that interact with montmorillonite clay minerals37. Additional experiments conducted under anoxic conditions showed that no oxygen-mediated inactivation took place (Supplementary Fig. 8), which supports again that the attachment of the viruses to the BLG AF–Fe is the main mechanism behind the virus elimination. Incubation experiments with H1N1 (Fig. 3e) and SARS-CoV-2 (Fig. 3f) showed comparable results to those of Φ6, which suggests a similar elimination mechanism for all three viruses.
These results together show that the Fe NPs combined with the AF features are the key element of the membrane: BLG AF alone did not show any virucidal effect, whereas BLG monomer–Fe had a noticeable, yet moderate, inactivating effect on the viruses compared with that of BLG AF–Fe hybrids. Previous studies suggested that strong attraction forces between positively charged iron hydroxides38 and negatively charged viruses39 can partially inactivate the virus via interactions with its capsid40,41,42. Our results, indeed, confirm that the Fe NPs, the BLG monomer–Fe and BLG AF–Fe are all positively charged at physiological pH values (Supplementary Fig. 9), whereas literature values show that H1N143 and the spike protein of SARS-CoV-244 are both negatively charged at physiological pH values. What is critically important, however, is the surface-to-volume ratio at which these surfaces become available: the 30 nm Fe NP control had no virucidal effect on Φ6, the BLG monomer Fe had a noticeable, partial effect and only BLG AF–Fe had an outstanding effect. The BLG AF provide an intricate network template that supports the formation of an Fe coating a few nanometres thick onto their elongated surface, that is, at a remarkably higher surface-to-volume ratio than that offered by the spherical geometry of Fe NPs and BLG monomer–Fe NPs. We anticipate that further insights into virus inactivation mechanisms within the BLG AF–Fe membranes could be gained with techniques such as radioactive labelling of the different components of the viruses, genome-wide PCR analysis and/or a variety of mass spectroscopy techniques, and so contribute to addressing the long-standing question of the molecular mechanisms behind virus inactivation at liquid/solid interfaces.
Performance of membranes on non-enveloped viruses
When tested on non-enveloped viruses, the BLG AF–Fe membranes again showed an outstanding performance. An elimination efficiency of more than six orders of magnitude was found for MS2 (Fig. 4a), a non-enveloped bacteriophage of ~28 nm diameter, which is very often used as a surrogate for human non-enveloped viruses45. The infectious virus concentrations went from ~106 PFU ml−1 before filtration to below the detection limit after filtration. Neither the cellulose support nor BLG AF alone showed any detectable effect on the infectivity of filtered MS2, which again demonstrates the unique synergistic effect of the BLG AF–Fe membranes. By quantifying the genome count before and after filtration (Supplementary Fig. 10), we observed that most of the viruses were retained on the membrane material, but still with a detectable amount of viral genomes that went through the filter. After filtration, the ratio of infective to total viruses (considered to be equivalent to the genome count) decreased by several orders of magnitude (Supplementary Fig. 10). The observed results again indicate that in the case of non-enveloped viruses, BLG AF–Fe hybrid membranes not only retain the virus but also probably inactivate it. Further assessment of the virucidal effect of the membrane was conducted by recovering the MS2 viruses retained on the membrane filter in a similar approach to that done for Φ6. The total genomes detected in the filtrate and recovered from the membrane accounted for ~65% of the total filtered viruses. Although it can neither be excluded that non-infective viruses are preferentially recovered over infective viruses nor that the viruses might be partially inactivated in the recovery process, we still observed a clear decrease in the ratio of infective-to-total viruses from 0.03 for the filtered solution to 0.01 of the recovered viruses (Fig. 4b). Finally, we tested the membrane against enterovirus 71 (EV71), a highly robust virus that is known to retain its infectivity in the digestive tract and is also highly resistant to acidic conditions. Figure 4c shows that after filtration through BLG AF–Fe membranes the infectivity of EV71 went down to approximately one-third of the infectivity before filtration. No reduction in infectivity was observed for filtration through the cellulose support or the BLG AF alone, which demonstrates again the efficacy of the membranes developed.
Sustainability footprint of the membranes
To assess the performance, cost and environmental impact of the BLG AF–Fe membranes in a broader context, we evaluated its efficiency and sustainability footprint and benchmarked it against one of the most-used membrane technologies for virus removal: nanofiltration (NF). NF is a relatively simple process that retains a wide range of viruses via size exclusion, with removal efficiencies of 4–6 orders of magnitude46. The evaluation is based on the three pillars of sustainability, that is, techno-economic, environmental and social, reflected by eight discriminants: operating costs, investment cost, energy consumed, water recovery, removal efficiency, pressure, public acceptability and environmental friendliness. The performance of the technology in each indicator is ranked by either a low (i = 1), medium (i = 2) or high (i = 3) level score47. By doing so, semi-qualitative factors, such as public acceptability and environmental friendliness, can also be included in the assessment. As shown in Fig. 5, NF scores medium and low in most discriminants, due to its high price, pressure, energy consumption48 and the release of toxic organic solvents during fabrication49, which is a typical problem of polymeric membranes50. The overall sustainability footprint is estimated by summing up the individual components as \(100\% \times \mathop {\sum }\limits_{j = 1}^8 \left( {\frac{i}{3}} \right)_j \times \frac{1}{8}\), where each of the j = 8 factors carries a weight between 1/3 and 1 depending on the score i. The sustainability footprints for BLG AF–Fe membranes and NF were estimated to 96 and 58%, respectively, which clearly highlights the superiority of BLG AF–Fe membranes over conventional membrane processes for virus removal in terms of efficiency, cost and sustainability. Although the sustainability footprint of traditional membrane technologies can be slightly increased by considering less environmentally aggressive methods than NF, such as ultrafiltration for which the sustainability footprint is ~63% (Supplementary Fig. 11), this comes at the expenses of virus removal efficiency, which drops down to insufficient values for safety requirements (for example, 2–4 orders of magnitude in ultrafiltration; Supplementary Fig. 11). Finally, we also showed that the mechanical stability of BLG AF–Fe can be further enhanced by introducing cellulose and carbon, which extends the time of service without a loss of performance (Supplementary Fig. 12).
Concluding remarks
In summary, we have shown the general and broad efficacy of AF–Fe membranes against both enveloped and non-enveloped viruses, which include key viruses such as SARS-CoV-2, H1N1 and EV71. The membrane introduced in this work is made by combining two widely available, food-grade components: AFs obtained by fibrillization of the milk protein BLG on which iron oxyhydroxide NPs are synthesized in situ from iron salts by simple pH changes, in a straightforward fabrication procedure. This is an antiviral filtration membrane made entirely by biosourced and biodegradable components. When combined with the outstanding virucidal properties of the membrane and the inactivation of the virus within it, these characteristics may allow a disposal of used membranes that is safe for both humans and the environment. Taken together, these results make this technology of immediate importance to mitigate current and future viral pandemics, as well as to address worldwide clean water challenges associated with pathogens.
Methods
A full detailed description of the materials and methods used in this work is provided in the Supplementary Information. A brief summary is given below.
Materials
The protein BLG was purified from whey protein isolate received as a kind gift from Fonterra.
For the viruses, Φ6 bacteriophage (21518) and MS2 bacteriophage (13767) were from the DSMZ culture collection; SARS-CoV-2/Switzerland/GE9586/2020 was isolated from a clinical specimen in the University Hospital in Geneva and replicated twice in Vero-E6 before the experiments. SARS-CoV-2/human/Switzerland/IMV5/2020 was isolated from a clinical specimen at the Institute of Medical Virology, University of Zurich and has been described previously54,55.
Human H1N1 virus A/Netherlands/602/2009 was a gift from M. Schmolke (Department of Microbiology and Molecular Medicine). EV71 was isolated from a clinical specimen at the University Hospital of Geneva in rhabdomyosarcoma cells. Cells were infected and the supernatant was collected 2 days postinfection, clarified, aliquoted and frozen at −80 °C before titration by plaque assay in rhabdomyosarcoma cells.
Methods
Purification of BLG monomers and preparation of AFs
The purification of BLG from the whey protein and the preparation of AFs from the purified protein are discussed in a previous report56.
Preparation of BLG AF–Fe hybrids
AFs coated with Fe NPs were obtained by mixing AF solution at pH 2 with an aqueous solution of FeCl3·6H2O and adjusting the pH to 7 with NaOH.
Preparation of BLG monomer–Fe NPs
BLG monomer–Fe NPs were prepared using a similar protocol as that used to prepare the BLG AF–Fe hybrids, but using BLG monomers instead of BLG AF.
Preparation of BLG AF–Fe membranes
A syringe-aided filtration set-up was used to prepare BLG AF–Fe membranes. A cellulose support with a 0.45 µm pore size was inserted into the filtration set-up and placed on a glass bottle. BLG AF–Fe hybrids (8 ml) were taken with the help of a syringe and injected into the filtration system, and extra water was drained to form a membrane.
Characterization of BLG AF–Fe hybrids by XPS
XPS was used to determine the AF–Fe hybrid composition. Iron(ii) and iron(iii) hydroxides were found to contribute to 26.4 and 63.2% of the total peak area, respectively, along with 10.4% of iron chloride (iron(ii) + iron(iii) chloride).
Additional methods used
Experimental details on inactivation of the Φ6, MS2, EV71, SARS-CoV-2 and H1N1 viruses via the incubation of different concentrations of BLG AF–Fe hybrids, filtration experiments, viral genome extraction and real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) are given in full in the Supplementary Information along with cytotoxicity tests on MDCK cells.
Details on cryo-SEM, SEM, TEM and cryo-TEM are also given in full in the Supplementary Information.
Data availability
All the data generated and analysed during this study are included in the article and its Supplementary Information. Source data are provided with this paper.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge support by the Innosuisse CTI grant no. 27165.1 PFLS-LS and the Swiss National Science Foundation project no. 31CA30_196217. W. Gruissem and M. Loessner at ETHZ are gratefully acknowledged for allowing access to their laboratory facilities, and E. Moritz (University of Zurich) for providing technical support. We acknowledge the support of the Scientific Center for Optical and Electron Microscopy (ScopeM) of ETH Zurich. M.G. acknowledges the support of NCCR Bio-Inspired Materials.
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A.P. carried out the experiments that involved the Φ6 bacteriophage and MS2 bacteriophage. A. Rahimi and S.B. carried out the synthesis of AF–Fe NPs. S.H. carried out the cryo-SEM, SEM, TEM and cryo-TEM experiments. C.M. carried out the experiments that involved H1N1, enteroviruses and RT-qPCR of SARS-CoV-2 under the supervision of C.T. M.G. carried out the filtration experiments of SARS-CoV-2 under the supervision of F.S. M.O.P. and I.B. carried out the SARS-CoV-2 incubation experiments under the supervision of B.G.H. and S.S. C.G. propagated and purified Φ6 and MS2 for electron microscopy imaging and RT-qPCR. A.A. designed the experiments on the determination of the inactivation mechanism for all viruses, RT-qPCR experiments for Φ6 and MS2, and propagation protocols for Φ6 and MS2; analysed the data and compiled the figures. A. Rossi carried out, processed and interpreted the XPS experiments. R.B.A. designed and conducted the RT-qPCR for Φ6 and MS2. M.P. and R.M. performed the evaluation of the sustainability footprint of the BLG AF–Fe and NF technologies. R.M. designed and directed the study, and analysed the data. A.P., A.A. and R.M. wrote the manuscript. All the authors edited and approved the final manuscript.
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Competing interests
R.M., A.P., S.B. and A. Rahimi are the inventors of a filed patent application related to the work presented here. All the other authors declare no competing interests.
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Peer review information Nature Nanotechnology thanks Volodymyr Tarabara and T. Waite for their contribution to the peer review of this work.
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Supplementary information
Supplementary Information
Supplementary Materials, Methods and Figs. 1–12.
Source data
Source Data Fig. 1
Uncropped.tif cryo-SEM, cryo-TEM and SEM images in Fig. 1.
Source Data Fig. 2
Source data for the infectivity and genome count of Φ6, H1N1 and SARS-CoV-2.
Source Data Fig. 3
Source data for the infectivity Φ6, H1N1 and SARS-CoV-2 Uncropped.tif TEM and cryo-TEM images in Figure_3.
Source Data Fig. 3
Source data for the infectivity Φ6, H1N1 and SARS-CoV-2 Uncropped.tif TEM and cryo-TEM images in Figure_3.
Source Data Fig. 4
Source data for the infectivity and genome count of MS2 and infectivity of EV71.
Source Data Fig. 5
Source data for the sustainability footprint calculations.
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Palika, A., Armanious, A., Rahimi, A. et al. An antiviral trap made of protein nanofibrils and iron oxyhydroxide nanoparticles. Nat. Nanotechnol. 16, 918–925 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-021-00920-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-021-00920-5
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