Have genetic targets for faecal pollution diagnostics and source tracking revolutionized water quality analysis yet?

Author:

Demeter Katalin1ORCID,Linke Rita1,Ballesté Elisenda2ORCID,Reischer Georg1ORCID,Mayer René E13ORCID,Vierheilig Julia4ORCID,Kolm Claudia3ORCID,Stevenson Margaret E5ORCID,Derx Julia5ORCID,Kirschner Alexander K T36ORCID,Sommer Regina6ORCID,Shanks Orin C7ORCID,Blanch Anicet R2ORCID,Rose Joan B8,Ahmed Warish9ORCID,Farnleitner Andreas H13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Chemical, Environmental and Bioscience Engineering 166, TU Wien , Gumpendorferstrasse 1A, 1060 Vienna , Austria

2. Departament de Genètica, Microbiologia I Estadística, Universitat de Barcelona , Av/ Diagonal 643, Barcelona , Spain

3. Division Water Quality and Health, Department of Pharmacology, Physiology and Microbiology, Karl Landsteiner University of Health Sciences , Dr.-Karl-Dorrek-Straße 30, 3500 Krems an der Donau, Austria

4. Institute of Water Quality and Resource Management , TU Wien , Lilienthalgasse 21 OD, 1030 Vienna Austria

5. Institute of Hydraulic Engineering and Water Resources Management, TU Wien , Karlsplatz 13, 1040 Vienna , Austria

6. Institute for Hygiene and Applied Immunology, CePII, Medical University of Vienna , Kinderspitalgasse 15, A-1090 Vienna , Austria

7. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development , Cincinnati , USA

8. College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Michigan State University , East Lansing , USA

9. CSIRO Environment, Ecosciences Precinct , 41 Boggo Rd, Dutton Park, QLD 4102 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract The impacts of nucleic acid-based methods - such as PCR and sequencing - to detect and analyze indicators, genetic markers or molecular signatures of microbial faecal pollution in health-related water quality research were assessed by rigorous literature analysis. A wide range of application areas and study designs has been identified since the first application more than 30 years ago (>1100 publications). Given the consistency of methods and assessment types, we suggest defining this emerging part of science as a new discipline: genetic faecal pollution diagnostics (GFPD) in health-related microbial water quality analysis. Undoubtedly, GFPD has already revolutionized faecal pollution detection (i.e., traditional or alternative general faecal indicator/marker analysis) and microbial source tracking (i.e., host-associated faecal indicator/marker analysis), the current core applications. GFPD is also expanding to many other research areas, including infection and health risk assessment, evaluation of microbial water treatment, and support of wastewater surveillance. In addition, storage of DNA extracts allows for biobanking, which opens up new perspectives. The tools of GFPD can be combined with cultivation-based standardized faecal indicator enumeration, pathogen detection, and various environmental data types, in an integrated data analysis approach. This comprehensive meta-analysis provides the scientific status quo of this field, including trend analyses and literature statistics, outlining identified application areas, and discusses the benefits and challenges of nucleic acid-based analysis in GFPD.

Funder

Gesellschaft für Forschungsförderung Niederösterreich

Vienna Science and Technology Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology

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