Specificity of virus adsorption to clay minerals

Abstract
Competitive adsorption studies indicated that reovirus type 3 and coliphage T1 did not share common adsorption sites on kaolinite and montmorillonite. Compounds in the minimal essential medium (e.g., fetal bovine serum, amino acids) in which the reovirus was maintained blocked adsorption of coliphage T1 to kaolinite and partially to montmorillonite in synthetic estuarine water, but they had no effect on coliphage adsorption to montmorillonite in distilled water or on the adsorption of the reovirus to either clay. The blockage of positively charged sites on kaolinite or montmorillonite by treatment of the clays with sodium metaphosphate or with the supernatants from montmorillonite or kaolinite, respectively, had no effect on adsorption of the reovirus. These data indicate that there was a specificity in adsorption sites for mixed populations of reovirus type 3 and coliphage T1 and emphasize the importance of using more than one type of virus, especially in combination, to predict virus behavior (e.g., adsorption, loss of infectivity) in soils and sediments containing clay minerals.