Sensitive detection of human adenovirus from small volume of primary wastewater samples by quantitative PCR.

J Virol Methods

CSIRO Land and Water, Ecosciences Precinct, 41 Boggo Road, Qld 4102, Australia.

Published: February 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • - A new, efficient method was created for detecting human adenovirus in wastewater, involving concentration of samples and extraction of high-purity nucleic acid using commercial kits.
  • - The two-step process includes using centrifugal filters on samples and DNA purification with extraction kits, showing significant differences in DNA yield and purity among five tested kits.
  • - Results indicate that the choice of nucleic acid extraction kit can affect the sensitivity of quantitative PCR (qPCR), with the Qiagen kit yielding significantly higher detection rates than others, making the method applicable for other DNA viruses in wastewater as well.

Article Abstract

An accurate quantitative detection of enteric viruses from the primary wastewater requires, sample concentration followed by extraction of nucleic acid with high purity. A highly efficient and sensitive method was developed for the concentration and quantitative detection of human adenovirus (HAdv) from wastewater samples. The two-step method which combines concentration of virus from 10 mL sample with centrifugal filters followed by extraction and purification of DNA with commercially available nucleic acid extraction kit resulted in high purity DNA for downstream quantitative PCR (qPCR). The results obtained on analytical sensitivities of five commercial nucleic acid extraction kits show that they differ in their ability for DNA yield and purity. Nevertheless, despite variable analytical sensitivities extracted nucleic acid was found to be relatively PCR inhibition free. The genomic copy numbers of HAdv detected from the same concentrated wastewater sample were significantly higher (P<0.01) when Qiagen Blood and Tissue kit (1.54×10(6) L(-1)) was used as compared to Mo-Bio PowerSoil kit (5.30×10(5) L(-1)) which suggests that the nucleic acid extraction kit can influence the sensitivity of qPCR assays. The method developed in this study is simple, rapid, sensitive, and can be applicable for the qPCR detection of adenovirus and other DNA virus in wastewater.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jviromet.2012.11.002DOI Listing

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