Journal of Water and Health (Feb 2024)

Detection of endotoxins from selected drinking water microbiota using an LAL-based assay and its implications for human health

  • Harmen Hawer,
  • Rebecca Burmester,
  • Nadine Sonnenberg,
  • Katja Weiß

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/wh.2024.207
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 2
pp. 290 – 295

Abstract

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Endotoxins are pyrogenic lipopolysaccharides from Gram-negative bacteria that are known to induce fever, septic shock, and multiple organ failure, posing a substantial risk to human health. Drinking water systems are especially prone to home microbiomes containing a large variety of Gram-negative bacteria. Consumption of water from these systems in developed countries is generally regarded as non-hazardous to humans due to the low number of non-pathogenic bacterial cells per milliliter and oral admission. To assess potential risks posed by endotoxins in drinking water systems, we conducted a conventional microbiological investigation on a local community water system in the north of Germany and mined the resulting data to investigate the endotoxin contents of some of the most abundant microbiota found during these analyses. Using a Limulus amoebocyte lysate (LAL) -based endotoxin detection method, average normalized endotoxin content was determined. Although the average culturable amounts of microbiota in the drinking water system were insufficient to exert endotoxin levels critical to human health, peaks and acute contaminations may pose substantial health risks. HIGHLIGHTS Endotoxin detection from cell suspensions of specific drinking water microbiota.; Endotoxin release from different bacterial species is highly variable.; Implications of species-specific endotoxin levels for human health.;

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