Author:
Minor Nicholas R.,Ramuta Mitchell D.,Stauss Miranda R.,Harwood Olivia E.,Brakefield Savannah F.,Alberts Alexandra,Vuyk William C.,Bobholz Max J.,Rosinski Jenna R.,Wolf Sydney,Lund Madelyn,Mussa Madison,Beversdorf Lucas J.,Aliota Matthew T.,O’Connor Shelby L.,O’Connor David H.
Abstract
AbstractInnovative methods for evaluating virus risk and spread, independent of test-seeking behavior, are needed to improve routine public health surveillance, outbreak response, and pandemic preparedness. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, environmental surveillance strategies, including wastewater and air sampling, have been used alongside widespread individual-based SARS-CoV-2 testing programs to provide population-level data. These environmental surveillance strategies have predominantly relied on pathogen-specific detection methods to monitor viruses through space and time. However, this provides a limited picture of the virome present in an environmental sample, leaving us blind to most circulating viruses. In this study, we explore whether pathogen-agnostic deep sequencing can expand the utility of air sampling to detect many human viruses. We show that sequence-independent single-primer amplification sequencing of nucleic acids from air samples can detect common and unexpected human respiratory and enteric viruses, including influenza virus type A and C, respiratory syncytial virus, human coronaviruses, rhinovirus, SARS-CoV-2, rotavirus, mamastrovirus, and astrovirus.
Funder
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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