posted on 2023-03-24, 23:43authored byFranciscus Chandra, Federica Armas, Germaine Kwok, Hongjie Chen, Feng Jun Desmond Chua, Mats Leifels, Nabil Amir-Hamzah, Xiaoqiong Gu, Stefan Wuertz, Wei Lin Lee, Eric J. Alm, Janelle Thompson
The potential public health utility of arthropod-borne
virus (arbovirus)
wastewater surveillance (WWS) warrants the effort of establishing
an effective sample preparation workflow. Here, we investigated different
sample clarification, concentration, and extraction methods to determine
the best workflow for recovery of spiked arboviral and murine hepatitis
virus RNA signals in wastewater. We determined that the sample clarification
method with the least loss is filtration through a 0.22 μm filter
(9.06 ± 3.68%) when compared with centrifugation. Out of four
different concentration methods (centrifugal ultrafiltration, polyethylene
glycol precipitation, charged membrane capture and elution, and hollow-fiber
ultrafiltration), centrifugal ultrafiltration, specifically using
Macrosep Advance column (30 kDa), has the highest mean recovery of
84.76 ± 17.45%. With this method, we can reliably recover seeded
arboviruses at concentrations corresponding to 10 infections in 400
to 180,000 people, depending on the shedding rate. As arboviruses
are expected to be on the rise due to the expansion of their vectors’
geographic distribution, this research will lay the foundation for
managing and reducing the impact of arboviral outbreaks through WWS-informed
public health measures.