Affiliation:
1. Food
and Drug Administration Gulf Coast Seafood Laboratory, Dauphin Island,
Alabama 36528
2. Department of
Epidemiology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
27599
Abstract
ABSTRACT
An
18-month survey was conducted to examine the prevalence of enteric
viruses and their relationship to indicators in environmentally
polluted shellfish. Groups of oysters, one group per 4 weeks, were
relocated to a coastal water area in the Gulf of Mexico that is
impacted by municipal sewage and were analyzed for enteroviruses,
Norwalk-like viruses (NLV), and indicator microorganisms (fecal
coliform,
Escherichia coli
, and male-specific coliphages). The
levels of indicator microorganisms were consistent with the expected
continuous pollution of the area. Fourteen of the 18 oyster samples
were found by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR to harbor NLV and/or
enterovirus sequences. Of the four virus-negative oysters, three had
exposure to water temperatures of >29°C. Concomitant
with these findings, two of these four oysters also accumulated the
lowest levels of coliphages. PCR primers targeting pan-enteroviruses
and the NLV 95/96-US common subset were utilized; NLV sequences were
detected more frequently than those of enteroviruses. Within the
12-month sampling period, NLV and enterovirus sequences were detected
in 58 and 42%, respectively, of the oysters (67% of the
oysters tested were positive for at least one virus) from a
prohibited shellfish-growing area approximately 30 m away
from a sewage discharge site. Eight (4.6%) of the 175 NLV capsid
nucleotide sequences were heterogeneous among the clones derived from
naturally polluted oysters. Overall, enteric viral sequences were found
in the contaminated oysters throughout all seasons except hot summer,
with a higher prevalence of NLV than enterovirus. Although a high
percentage of the oysters harbored enteric viruses, the virus levels
were usually less than or equal to 2 logs of RT-PCR-detectable units
per gram of oyster
meat.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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