Wastewater surveillance for viral pathogens: A tool for public health
Matheus Carmo dos Santos,
No information about this author
Ana Clara Cerqueira Silva,
No information about this author
Carine dos Reis Teixeira
No information about this author
et al.
Heliyon,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
10(13), P. e33873 - e33873
Published: June 29, 2024
A
focus
on
water
quality
has
intensified
globally,
considering
its
critical
role
in
sustaining
life
and
ecosystems.
Wastewater,
reflecting
societal
development,
profoundly
impacts
public
health.
Wastewater-based
epidemiology
(WBE)
emerged
as
a
surveillance
tool
for
detecting
outbreaks
early,
monitoring
infectious
disease
trends,
providing
real-time
insights,
particularly
vulnerable
communities.
WBE
aids
tracking
pathogens,
including
viruses,
sewage,
offering
comprehensive
understanding
of
community
health
lifestyle
habits.
With
the
rise
global
COVID-19
cases,
gained
prominence,
aiding
SARS-CoV-2
levels
worldwide.
Despite
advancements
treatment,
poorly
treated
wastewater
discharge
remains
threat,
amplifying
spread
water-,
sanitation-,
hygiene
(WaSH)-related
diseases.
WBE,
serving
complementary
surveillance,
is
pivotal
community-level
viral
infections.
However,
there
untapped
potential
to
expand
surveillance.
This
review
emphasizes
importance
link
between
health,
highlighting
need
further
integration
into
management.
Language: Английский
Persistence of human respiratory viral RNA in wastewater-settled solids
Applied and Environmental Microbiology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
90(4)
Published: March 19, 2024
Wastewater-based
epidemiology
has
emerged
as
a
valuable
tool
for
monitoring
respiratory
viral
diseases
within
communities
by
analyzing
concentrations
of
nucleic-acids
in
wastewater.
However,
little
is
known
about
the
fate
virus
Two
important
processes
that
may
modulate
their
wastewater
they
move
from
household
drains
to
point
collection
include
sorption
or
partitioning
solids
and
degradation.
This
study
investigated
decay
kinetics
genomic
seven
human
viruses,
including
severe
acute
syndrome
coronavirus
2
(SARS-CoV-2),
syncytial
(RSV),
(HCoV)-OC43,
HCoV-229E,
HCoV-NL63,
rhinovirus
(HRV),
influenza
A
(IAV),
well
pepper
mild
mottle
(PMMoV)
solids.
Viruses
(except
PMMoV)
were
spiked
into
followed
50
days
at
three
different
temperatures
(4°C,
22°C,
37°C).
Viral
RNA
decayed
following
first-order
with
rate
constants
Language: Английский
Advances in rapid point-of-care virus testing
Yupeng Zhang,
No information about this author
Jin-Wei Bu,
No information about this author
Shu Ru-Xin
No information about this author
et al.
The Analyst,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
149(9), P. 2507 - 2525
Published: Jan. 1, 2024
The
researchers
detect
viruses
through
various
analyses
based
on
three
targets:
nucleic
acids,
antigens,
and
antibodies.
Language: Английский
Viral RNA reduction from wastewaters using microalgae-based treatments: Elucidating the effect of light and zero-valent iron nanoparticles
Bioresource Technology,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
unknown, P. 132389 - 132389
Published: March 1, 2025
Language: Английский
Advances in Wastewater-Based Epidemiology in the ES&T Family of Journals
Environmental Science & Technology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
58(27), P. 11865 - 11868
Published: June 17, 2024
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TO
ARTICLES
ASAPPREVEditorialNEXTAdvances
in
Wastewater-Based
Epidemiology
the
ES&T
Family
of
JournalsTimothy
R.
JulianTimothy
JulianEawag,
Swiss
Federal
Institute
Aquatic
Science
and
Technology,
8600
Duebendorf,
SwitzerlandMore
by
Timothy
JulianView
Biographyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1000-0306
Alexandria
B.
Boehm*Alexandria
BoehmDepartment
Civil
&
Environmental
Engineering,
Stanford
University,
Stanford,
California
94305,
United
States*[email
protected],
650-724-9128More
BoehmView
Biographyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8162-5090Cite
this:
Environ.
Sci.
Technol.
2024,
XXXX,
XXX,
XXX-XXXPublication
Date
(Web):June
17,
2024Publication
History
Received16
May
2024Published
online17
June
2024https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.4c04913https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c04913editorialACS
PublicationsCopyright
©
Published
2024
American
Chemical
Society.
This
publication
is
available
under
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Use.
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e-AlertscloseSUBJECTS:Biomarkers,COVID-19,Immunology,SARS-CoV-2,Wastewater
e-Alerts
Language: Английский
Influence of Amino Acid Substitutions in Capsid Proteins of Coxsackievirus B5 on Free Chlorine and Thermal Inactivation
Environmental Science & Technology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
58(12), P. 5279 - 5289
Published: March 15, 2024
The
sensitivity
of
enteroviruses
to
disinfectants
varies
among
genetically
similar
variants
and
coincides
with
amino
acid
changes
in
capsid
proteins,
although
the
effect
individual
substitutions
remains
unknown.
Here,
we
employed
reverse
genetics
investigate
how
coxsackievirus
B5
(CVB5)
proteins
affect
virus'
free
chlorine
heat
treatment.
Of
ten
observed
CVB5
resistance,
none
significantly
reduced
sensitivity,
indicating
a
minor
role
composition
CVB5.
Conversely,
subset
these
located
at
C-terminal
region
viral
protein
1
led
sensitivity.
Cryo-electron
microscopy
revealed
that
assembly
intermediate
states
(altered
empty
particles),
suggesting
mechanism
for
could
be
related
improved
molecular
packing
CVB5,
resulting
greater
stability
or
altered
dynamics
virus
uncoating
during
infection.
Language: Английский
Advances in Wastewater-Based Epidemiology in the ES&T Family of Journals
Environmental Science & Technology Letters,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
11(7), P. 650 - 653
Published: June 17, 2024
ADVERTISEMENT
RETURN
TO
ARTICLES
ASAPPREVEditorialNEXTAdvances
in
Wastewater-Based
Epidemiology
the
ES&T
Family
of
JournalsTimothy
R.
JulianTimothy
JulianEawag,
Swiss
Federal
Institute
Aquatic
Science
and
Technology,
8600
Duebendorf,
SwitzerlandMore
by
Timothy
JulianView
Biographyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1000-0306
Alexandria
B.
Boehm*Alexandria
BoehmDepartment
Civil
&
Environmental
Engineering,
Stanford
University,
Stanford,
California
94305,
United
States*[email
protected],
650-724-9128More
BoehmView
Biographyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8162-5090Cite
this:
Environ.
Sci.
Technol.
Lett.
2024,
XXXX,
XXX,
XXX-XXXPublication
Date
(Web):June
17,
2024Publication
History
Received17
May
2024Accepted17
2024Published
online17
June
2024https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.estlett.4c00406https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.estlett.4c00406editorialACS
PublicationsCopyright
©
Published
2024
American
Chemical
Society.
This
publication
is
available
under
these
Terms
Use.
Request
reuse
permissions
free
to
access
through
this
site.
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MoreArticle
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METRICSArticle
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COUNTER-compliant
sum
full
text
article
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2008
(both
PDF
HTML)
across
all
institutions
individuals.
These
metrics
regularly
updated
reflect
usage
leading
up
last
few
days.Citations
number
other
articles
citing
article,
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Crossref
daily.
Find
more
information
about
citation
counts.The
Altmetric
Attention
Score
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that
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online.
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e-AlertscloseSUBJECTS:Biomarkers,COVID-19,Immunology,SARS-CoV-2,Wastewater
e-Alerts
Language: Английский
Advances in Wastewater-Based Epidemiology in the ES&T Family of Journals
ACS ES&T Water,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
4(7), P. 2768 - 2771
Published: June 17, 2024
ADVERTISEMENT
RETURN
TO
ARTICLES
ASAPPREVEditorialNEXTAdvances
in
Wastewater-Based
Epidemiology
the
ES&T
Family
of
JournalsTimothy
R.
JulianTimothy
JulianEawag,
Swiss
Federal
Institute
Aquatic
Science
and
Technology,
8600
Duebendorf,
SwitzerlandMore
by
Timothy
JulianView
Biographyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-1000-0306
Alexandria
B.
Boehm*Alexandria
BoehmDepartment
Civil
&
Environmental
Engineering,
Stanford
University,
Stanford,
California
94305,
United
States*[email
protected],
650-724-9128More
BoehmView
Biographyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-8162-5090Cite
this:
ACS
EST
Water
2024,
XXXX,
XXX,
XXX-XXXPublication
Date
(Web):June
17,
2024Publication
History
Received17
May
2024Published
online17
June
2024https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsestwater.4c00459https://doi.org/10.1021/acsestwater.4c00459editorialACS
PublicationsCopyright
©
2024
American
Chemical
Society.
This
publication
is
available
under
these
Terms
Use.
Request
reuse
permissions
free
to
access
through
this
site.
Learn
MoreArticle
Views-Altmetric-Citations-LEARN
ABOUT
THESE
METRICSArticle
Views
are
COUNTER-compliant
sum
full
text
article
downloads
since
November
2008
(both
PDF
HTML)
across
all
institutions
individuals.
These
metrics
regularly
updated
reflect
usage
leading
up
last
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days.Citations
number
other
articles
citing
article,
calculated
Crossref
daily.
Find
more
information
about
citation
counts.The
Altmetric
Attention
Score
a
quantitative
measure
attention
that
research
has
received
online.
Clicking
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Get
e-AlertscloseSUBJECTS:Biomarkers,COVID-19,Immunology,SARS-CoV-2,Wastewater
e-Alerts
Language: Английский
Detection and quantification of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) total nucleic acids in wastewater settled solids from two California communities
Applied and Environmental Microbiology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: Nov. 11, 2024
Wastewater
surveillance
for
infectious
agents
has
proved
useful
in
identifying
the
circulation
of
viruses
within
populations.
We
investigated
presence
and
concentration
human
immunodeficiency
virus
(HIV)-1
total
nucleic
acids
(including
both
viral
RNA
proviral
DNA)
wastewater
solids.
retrospectively
measured
HIV-1
two
samples
per
week
26
months
at
treatment
plants
serving
populations
with
different
prevalences
HIV
infections
San
Francisco
Santa
Clara
County,
California,
USA.
detected
a
majority
concentrations
ranging
from
non-detect
to
3.9
×
10
Language: Английский