Comparative analysis of membrane filter diameters for detection of selected viruses in wastewater samples

Wastewater serves as a valuable source of information as it contains biological markers that have been shed by infected individuals and from other biological organisms such as plants and animals. Wastewater has been proven to indicate the presence of emerging pathogens in a community before the mani...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2024-10, Vol.947, p.173973, Article 173973
Hauptverfasser: Solomon, Tamunobelema, Idris, Oladele, Nwaubani, Daniel, Baral, Rakshya, Sherchan, Samendra P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Wastewater serves as a valuable source of information as it contains biological markers that have been shed by infected individuals and from other biological organisms such as plants and animals. Wastewater has been proven to indicate the presence of emerging pathogens in a community before the manifestation of clinical symptoms. Several methods of concentration and nucleic acid extraction have been employed all around the world without a unified method. One such method involves the use of the adsorption extraction method (AE-method), which involves the use of electronegative membrane filters of different pore sizes. The membrane filters also differ by diameter, but no study has been reported on the effect of diameter on capture efficiency. This study was aimed at evaluating the comparative capture efficiency of two different membrane filter diameters of 45 and 90 mm with pore sizes of 0.45 μm for the detection of indicator and pathogenic viruses. Primary influent samples were obtained from two wastewater treatment plants in Baltimore, Maryland, between April 27 and June 29, 2023. A total of twenty samples were processed using 45- and 90-mm membrane filters. Nucleic acids were extracted from the filters using the QIAmp Viral RNA Mini Kit and assayed for four different targets: PMMoV, Norovirus (GI and GII), and CrAssphage by RT-qPCR. The result showed that 45 mm membrane filters had a higher combined mean capture efficiency in log10 gene copies per liter (gc/l) for crAssphage (7.40) than 90 mm membrane filters (7.10). Similarly, the 45-mm filter had higher mean capture efficiency for Norovirus GI (4.67) than the 90-mm filter (1.84) and likewise for Norovirus GII (2.14, 1.04). On the contrary, 90-mm membrane filters were observed to have better capture of PMMoV (6.84) compared to 45-mm membrane filters (6.69). This result therefore implies that 45-mm membrane filters could be more efficient for wastewater surveillance studies through the AE method for indicator viruses like CrAssphage and human disease-causing viruses like Norovirus. [Display omitted] •45- and 90-mm membrane filter diameters were evaluated for wastewater surveillance of selected viruses.•Pathogen and indicator viruses were captured differently by both membrane filters.•45-mm membrane filters had higher sensitivity and mean capture of Noroviruses.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173973