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  3. Impact of pH and temperature in dairy processing on the infectivity of H5N1 avian influenza viruses.
 

Impact of pH and temperature in dairy processing on the infectivity of H5N1 avian influenza viruses.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/89020
Date of Publication
June 26, 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institute of Virology...

Department of Infecti...

Author
Lenz-Ajuh, Nicole
Rau, Leonie
Butticaz, Lisa
Moreira, Étori Aguiar
Zimmer, Bettina
Beuret, Vincent
Loosli, Florian
Ingenhoff, Jan-Erik
Wieland, Barbara
Institute of Virology and Immunology
Zimmer, Gert
Institute of Virology and Immunology
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::630...

Series
International Journal of Food Microbiology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1879-3460
0168-1605
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2025.111328
PubMed ID
40609330
Uncontrolled Keywords

Food safety

Hemagglutinin

Lactic acid fermentat...

Pasteurization

Raw milk

Semi-hard cheese

Soft cheese

Thermization

Yoghurt

Description
Highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses of subtype H5N1 (clade 2.3.4.4b) can cause a mastitis-like disease in dairy cows. The presence of high amounts of infectious H5N1 virus in milk has raised significant concerns about the safety of raw milk products. In this study, the effect of temperature and pH on the stability of H5N1 viruses was investigated. We found that both bovine and avian H5N1 viruses remained infectious when incubated in milk at 4 °C for four weeks. When the viruses were incubated in milk at 21 °C, infectivity of avian H5N1 decreased only slightly and of bovine H5N1 moderately. The avian H5N1 virus was stable at 50 °C for 30 min but was inactivated at higher temperatures (55 °C for 10 min, 60 °C for 1 min, or 72 °C for 30 s). Bovine and avian H5N1 viruses were stable at pH levels between 6.0 and 10.0, but were partially inactivated at pH 5.0 and completely inactivated at pH 4.0. Both H5N1 viruses were completely inactivated when incubated with yoghurt at pH 4.2. Incubation of the avian H5N1 virus with soft and semi-hard cheese at pH 5.0-5.3 reduced infectious titers by 5.1 and 3.9 log10, respectively. In contrast, the infectivity of bovine H5N1 was only minimally reduced following incubation with semi-hard cheese. In conclusion, H5N1 viruses are efficiently inactivated by pasteurization and most thermisation procedures. However, in untreated raw milk bovine H5N1 virus may survive cheese-making processes if the production temperature stays below 50 °C.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/212827
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1-s2.0-S0168160525002739-main.pdftextAdobe PDF4.17 MBAttribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0)publishedOpen
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