Water (Aug 2020)

Profile of the Spatial Distribution Patterns of the Human and Bacteriophage Virome in a Wastewater Treatment Plant Located in the South of Spain

  • Cristina García-Fontana,
  • Alejandro Rodriguez-Sanchez,
  • Barbara Muñoz-Palazon,
  • Alejandro Gonzalez-Martinez,
  • Maria Vela-Cano,
  • Jesus Gonzalez-Lopez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w12082316
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 2316

Abstract

Read online

In wastewater treatment plants, most microbial characterization has focused on bacterial, archaeal, and fungal populations. Due to the difficult isolation, quantification, and identification of viruses, only a limited number of virome studies associated with wastewater treatment plants have been carried out. However, the virus populations play an important role in the microbial dynamics in wastewater treatment systems and the biosafety of effluents. In this work, the viral members present in influent wastewater, mixed liquor (aerobic bioreactor), excess sludge, and effluent water of a conventional activated sludge system for the treatment of urban wastewater were identified. Viral members were observed by transmission electron microscopy and studied through next-generation sequencing studies. The results showed the dominance of bacteriophages in the viral community in all samples, with the dominant viral phylotype classified as Escherichia coli O157 typing phage 7. Moreover, different human viruses, such as Cynomolgus cytomegalovirus and Gammaherpesvirus, were also detected.

Keywords