Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has increased public health vigilance worldwide. The coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) can spread via aerosols, and droplet-borne viruses remain viable on nonliving surfaces for long duration. Hence, effective antiviral coatings are highly useful in eliminating viral persistence on nonliving surfaces. Although innovative antiviral coatings have been designed, conventional procedures for antiviral assays are generally laborious, time-consuming, and have a high limit of detection. In the present study, we report a rapid and highly sensitive method for evaluating antiviral coatings by measuring the luciferase activity derived from recombinant Sendai virus (SeV). The physicochemical characteristics of SeV, which has a single-stranded RNA genome encapsulated within a lipid envelope, allow us to exploit it as an indicator of the physicochemical potential of coating materials against enveloped RNA viruses in general. We demonstrate that SeV-based assay systems allow for the rapid and quantitative evaluation of the surface coatings composed of iodine solubilized in polyvinyl acetate. Additionally, we have investigated the effect of mucins, the dominant protein component of saliva, on the antiviral activity of surface coatings. The presence of mucins in the SeV suspension considerably rescues luciferase activity at the viral-surface interface, presumably due to mucin-mediated viral protection. Our findings provide insights into a procedure capable of the rapid evaluation and optimization of surface coatings, and suggest an important role of the mucin in the valid evaluation of antiviral agents.

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