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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2006, p. 7894-7896, Vol. 72, No. 12
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00965-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Department of Microbiology,1 Department of Statistics, Faculty of Biology, University of Barcelona, Av. Diagonal 645, Barcelona 08028, Spain,2 Department of Clinical Virology, Umeå University Hospital, S-901 85 Umeå, Sweden3
Received 24 April 2006/ Accepted 2 October 2006
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A total of 28 samples were obtained from a wastewater treatment plant located in the south of Barcelona (Spain) which treats the domestic and industrial wastewater from a population equivalent of 400,000 with a capability of 72,000 m3 per day. The treatment includes primary sedimentation and aerobic activated sludge digestion. The samples analyzed consisted of six raw sewage samples, seven treated wastewater samples, eight sludge samples (dry weight, 3.6% to 4%) and, finally, seven biosolid samples (dry weight, 25%).
Recovery of viral particles from sewage was carried out following a previously described procedure (13) presenting an estimated recovery efficiency of 34% for JCPyV. Recovery of viral particles from effluent wastewater was carried out following EPA procedure 600/4-84/013 (N14) (www.epa.gov/microbes/chapt14.pdf) combined with a second concentration procedure (13). The recovery efficiencies observed for this combined procedure were 0.15 to 0.16% for JCPyV and 2 to 25% for HAdV. Recovery of viral particles from sludge and biosolid samples was carried out by applying a method based on EPA 600/4-84/013 (R7) (www.epa.gov/nerlcwww/chap7.pdf) with minor modifications. Viral nucleic acids were extracted by a procedure described by Boom et al. (3) which have been previously detailed (7).
Two QPCR procedures based on the use of TaqMan probes (8, 9) were evaluated for their suitability in the analysis and quantification of HAdV present in different wastewater matrices (Table 1) . After comparing the two QPCR methods by statistically analyzing the results obtained by applying two different analysis of variation (ANOVA) tests, we concluded that assay 1 (9) was significantly different from assay 2 (8) in that it detected a higher number of HAdV (P = 0.012 in the repeated measures ANOVA for sewage and effluent wastewater; P = 0.004 in the repeated measures ANOVA for sludge and biosolids; P < 0.001 for both sewage and effluent wastewater and for sludge and biosolids in the nested hierarchical ANOVA). The specificity of assay 1 for detecting the diverse HAdV serotypes had been previously evaluated, and adenoviruses belonging to all six human species have been detected. However, some strains of animal adenoviruses excreted by farm animals may also be detected with the described protocol (data not shown).
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TABLE 1. Quantification by HAdV and JCPyV QPCR and presence of HEV evaluated by nested RT-PCR in different types of wastewater matrices obtained from a wastewater treatment plant
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The quantification of JCPyV has been evaluated using a QPCR assay (11) that showed to be specific and highly sensitive for JCPyV, which is a very stable DNA virus presenting a low level of genetic variability. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first attempt to detect JCPyV in treated urban sewage and in the sludge and/or biosolids generated in wastewater treatment plants (Table 1).
The sensitivities of both QPCR assays applied in this study were estimated to be of 1 to 10 genome copies (GC).
High concentrations of HAdV and JCPyV were found in sludge and biosolid samples (Tables 1 and 2) . HEV RNA was also detected in 6/12 analyzed samples by seminested reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) with degenerated primers (6) as previously described (5) by use of a one-step RT-PCR procedure (QIAGEN OneStep RT-PCR kit) (Table 1). HEV strains were typed as genotype 3, but in two samples genotype 1 was observed. HEV has traditionally been considered nonendemic in industrialized areas, but several isolates of the virus have been recently identified in these areas. Previous studies carried out in Barcelona revealed a high frequency of HEV-positive sewage samples (43.5%) and identified clinical cases of sporadic acute hepatitis E (4, 5, 12).
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TABLE 2. Mean values and sigma for HAdV and JCPyV GC in the different wastewater matrices analyzeda
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Enzymatic inhibition has been observed by other authors when applying this methodology to environmental samples (10). In this study, enzymatic inhibition was also observed when external controls, known quantities of target, were added to nucleic acid extraction from the environmental samples without previous dilution of the extractions. However, the high level of viral contamination in this kind of sample allows the preparation of dilutions, thus avoiding inhibitory conditions and producing reliable information on viral concentration; this reliability has been proven by the statistical analysis of two different 10-fold dilutions (1:10 and 1:100) of the sample tested (P = 0.281 and 0.430 for sewage/effluent wastewater and sludge/biosolids, respectively).
In order to study the stability of HAdV and JCPyV in sewage samples, raw sewage was kept in nonhermetic glass containers in a 20°C thermostatic room, and aliquots of 42 ml were collected and concentrated at days 0, 1, 4, 7, 14, 21, 28, 42, 84, 105, 135, 168, 225, and 300 as described above. Viral genomes present in the samples were evaluated by the described QPCR assays. Sterile spiked phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) was kept as a control for the experiment. Samples were tested in two parallel assays with and without previous treatment with DNase before the nucleic acid extraction in order to identify potential free DNA in the samples. The analysis applied, using simple linear regression, had previously been described when the stability of human polyomaviruses in sewage samples was studied by use of limiting-dilution nested-PCR assays (1).
The t90 (time required to observe a reduction of 90% in the initial viral concentration) and t99 values have been calculated according to the regression curve obtained. A t90 of 60.9 days and a t99 of 132.3 days for HAdV (Fig. 1a) and a t90 of 63.9 days and t99 of 127.3 days for JCPyV (Fig. 1b) were estimated. When DNase was added, we estimated a t90 of 55.8 days and a t99 of 126.1 days for HAdV and a t90 of 59.3 days and t99 of 121.4 days for JCPyV. As expected, the studied viruses showed higher stability in PBS than in sewage. The estimated t90 values for HAdV and JCPyV in PBS were 236.8 and 110.8 days, respectively, and were 140.7 and 80.8 days when samples were pretreated with DNase. The high stability of the HAdV observed is in agreement with what has been previously described (15). No remarkable differences have been noticed when DNase was added to the experiment, and the genomes detected presumably represent full viral particles. The infectivities of viruses present in the analyzed samples have not been tested due to the difficulty of culturing low concentrations of these environmental strains, especially JCPyV strains, which typically present archetypal regulatory regions and are very difficult to grow in cell culture.
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FIG. 1. Stability of HAdV (1a) and JCPyV (1b) in sewage samples. The regression (discontinuous line) and transformed (solid line) values of the averages of GC detected by QPCR in the three samples (sewage) are represented.
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The specific detection and quantification by QPCR of HAdV and JCPyV in different wastewater matrices might serve as a useful tool for indicating the presence of viral pathogens and for evaluating the efficiency of virus removal in wastewater treatment plants and the risk associated to the applications of biosolids in agricultural practices, as well as for controlling the virological quality of recycled water.
We thank Serveis Científico Tècnics of the University of Barcelona for the sequencing of PCR products.
Published ahead of print on 6 October 2006. ![]()
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