All plasma samples were first thawed and centrifuged at 10.000g, +4°C for 10 minutes to remove debris. Because bats can harbor many viruses, supernatants were treated in a P2 laboratory for viral inactivation using a standard solvent/detergent protocol used for human blood plasma products (34 (link), 35 (link)) and described in (36 (link)) and in (32 (link)). Briefly, samples were treated with Tri-n-Butyl Phosphate (TnBP) 0.3% (v/v) and Triton X100 (TX100) 1% (v/v) for 2 hours at room temperature. After treatment, TnBP was removed by passing the samples through a C18 column (Discovery DSC-18 SPE from Supelco). For digital ELISA assays, inactivated samples and stimulated cell supernatants were diluted in the Detector/Sample Diluent (Quanterix) added with NP40 0,5% (v/v). They were then incubated for one hour at room temperature before analysis. Global dilution factor was generally 1/6 for plasma samples and 1/3 for stimulated cell supernatants depending on the amount of material available and to allow the optimal protein detection.
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