A new understanding of somatic coliphages belonging to the Microviridae family in urban wastewater

Archive ouverte

Bichet, Marion, C | Gardette, Marion | das Neves, Benjamin | Challant, Julie | Erbs, Anaïs | Roman, Véronica | Robin, Maëlle | La Carbona, Stéphanie | Gantzer, Christophe | Boudaud, Nicolas | Bertrand, Isabelle

Edité par CCSD ; IWA Publishing/Elsevier -

International audience. Somatic coliphages (SC) and F-specific RNA coliphages (FRNAPH) have been included in regulations or guidelines by several developed countries as a way of monitoring water safety and the microbiological quality of shellfish harvesting waters. SC are highly diverse in their morphology, size and genome. The Microviridae family contains three genera of phages (Alphatrevirus, Gequatrovirus, and Sinsheimervirus), all having a capsid of similar morphology (icosahedral) and size (25-30 nm in diameter) to that of common pathogenic enteric viruses. Three PCR assays specific for each genus of Microviridae were designed to study these phages in raw and treated wastewater (WW) in order to gain knowledge about the diversity and prevalence of Microviridae among SC, as well as their inactivation and removal during WW treatments. Among the four wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) monitored here, two WWTPs applied disinfection by UV light as tertiary treatment. First, we noticed that Microviridae represented 10 to 30 % of infectious SC in both raw and treated WW. Microviridae appeared to behave in the same way as all SC during these WW treatments. As expected, the highest inactivation, at least 4 log10, was achieved for infectious Microviridae and SC in both WWTPs using UV disinfection. PCR assays showed that the highest removal of Microviridae reached about 4 log10, but the phage removal can vary greatly between WWTPs using similar treatments. This work forms the basis for a broader evaluation of Microviridae as a viral indicator of water treatment efficiency and WW reuse.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Toward better monitoring of human noroviruses and F-specific RNA bacteriophages in aquatic environments using bivalve mollusks and passive samplers: A case study

Archive ouverte | Do Nascimento, Julie | CCSD

International audience. Monitoring pathogenic enteric viruses in continental and marine water bodies is essential to control the viral contamination of human populations. Human Noroviruses (NoV) are the main enteric...

Optimized protocol for direct extraction of SARS-CoV-2 RNA from raw wastewater samples (ANRS 0160)

Archive ouverte | Chaqroun, Ahlam | CCSD

International audience. This study aimed to evaluate whether a nucleic acid extraction protocol specifically designed for raw wastewater (WW) provides a measurable advantage over protocols not originally intended fo...

Aerobic Conditions and Endogenous Reactive Oxygen Species Reduce the Production of Infectious MS2 Phage by Escherichia coli

Archive ouverte | Bastin, Guillaume | CCSD

International audience. Most of the defective/non-infectious enteric phages and viruses that end up in wastewater originate in human feces. Some of the causes of this high level of inactivity at the host stage are u...

Chargement des enrichissements...