SARS-CoV-2 RNA Detection in Wastewater and Its Effective Correlation with Clinical Data during the Outbreak of COVID-19 in Salamanca.
Angel Emilio Martínez de AlbaMaría Eugenia Morán-DiezJuan Carlos García-PrietoJuan García-Bernalt DiegoPedro Fernández-SotoEsteban Serrano LeónVíctor MonsalvoMarta CasaoMaría Belén RubioRosa HermosaAntonio MuroManuel García-RoigEnrique MontePublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2024)
Wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are the final stage of the anthropogenic water cycle where a wide range of chemical and biological markers of human activity can be found. In COVID-19 disease contexts, wastewater surveillance has been used to infer community trends based on viral abundance and SARS-CoV-2 RNA variant composition, which has served to anticipate and establish appropriate protocols to prevent potential viral outbreaks. Numerous studies worldwide have provided reliable and robust tools to detect and quantify SARS-CoV-2 RNA in wastewater, although due to the high dilution and degradation rate of the viral RNA in such samples, the detection limit of the pathogen has been a bottleneck for the proposed protocols so far. The current work provides a comprehensive and systematic study of the different parameters that may affect the detection of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in wastewater and hinder its quantification. The results obtained using synthetic viral RNA as a template allow us to consider that 10 genome copies per µL is the minimum RNA concentration that provides reliable and consistent values for the quantification of SARS-CoV-2 RNA. RT-qPCR analysis of wastewater samples collected at the WWTP in Salamanca (western Spain) and at six pumping stations in the city showed that below this threshold, positive results must be confirmed by sequencing to identify the specific viral sequence. This allowed us to find correlations between the SARS-CoV-2 RNA levels found in wastewater and the COVID-19 clinical data reported by health authorities. The close match between environmental and clinical data from the Salamanca case study has been confirmed by similar experimental approaches in four other cities in the same region. The present methodological approach reinforces the usefulness of wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) studies in the face of future pandemic outbreaks.
Keyphrases
- sars cov
- wastewater treatment
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- antibiotic resistance genes
- anaerobic digestion
- public health
- healthcare
- nucleic acid
- coronavirus disease
- electronic health record
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- single cell
- risk factors
- big data
- human health
- climate change
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- amino acid
- case control
- social media