Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4481150 Water Research 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Enteric viruses and coliphages were monitored in an urban freshwater catchment.•Among pathogens, the most prevalent type was NoV followed by HAdV.•Among FRNA coliphages, the most prevalent type was FRNA GI followed by FRNA GII.•Human-specific coliphages were positively associated with human viral pathogens.•FRNA GII correlated with norovirus, adenovirus, rotavirus and astrovirus.

This study aimed to evaluate the relationship between FRNA coliphages (FRNA GI to GIV) and human enteric viruses (human adenoviruses, HAdV, astroviruses, AstV, noroviruses, NoV, and rotaviruses, RoV) in a tropical urban freshwater catchment. Positive associations between human-specific coliphages and human viral pathogens substantiate their use as viral indicators and in microbial source tracking. Reverse transcription qPCR was used to measure the concentrations of viruses and FRNA coliphages in concentrated water samples. Environmental water samples were also analyzed for male-specific (F+) and somatic (Som) coliphages using plaque assay. The most abundant enteric virus was NoV (55%) followed by HAdV (33%), RoV (33%), and AstV (23%), while the most abundant FRNA genogroup was GI (85%) followed by GII (48%), GIV (8%) and GIII (7%). Concentrations of human-specific coliphages FRNA GII were positively correlated with NoV, HAdV, RoV, AstV, F+ and Som (τ = 0.5 to 0.3, P < 0.05) while concentrations of animal-specific coliphages FRNA GI were negatively correlated with HAdV and RoV (τ = −0.2, P < 0.05). This study demonstrates statistical relationships between human-specific coliphages and a suite of human enteric viruses in the environment.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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