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Evaluation of the Impact of Concentration and Extraction Methods on the Targeted Sequencing of Human Viruses from Wastewater

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Evaluation of the Impact of Concentration and Extraction Methods on the Targeted Sequencing of Human Viruses from Wastewater

M. Jiang, A. L. W. Wang, et al.

Sequencing human viruses in wastewater faces low-abundance challenges; this study compared four concentration/extraction methods (Innovaprep, Nanotrap, Promega, Solids) and found method-dependent virus profiles. Innovaprep ultrafiltration yielded the highest sequencing sensitivity and assembled near-complete genomes, while Promega and Nanotrap were more sensitive for SARS-CoV-2 by dPCR. Research was conducted by Authors present in <Authors> tag.... show more
Abstract
Sequencing human viruses in wastewater is challenging due to their low abundance compared to the total microbial background. This study compared the impact of four virus concentration/extraction methods (Innovaprep, Nanotrap, Promega, and Solids extraction) on probe-capture enrichment for human viruses followed by sequencing. Different concentration/extraction methods yielded distinct virus profiles. Innovaprep ultrafiltration (following solids removal) had the highest sequencing sensitivity and richness, resulting in the successful assembly of several near-complete human virus genomes. However, it was less sensitive in detecting SARS-CoV-2 by digital polymerase chain reaction (dPCR) compared to Promega and Nanotrap. Across all preparation methods, astroviruses and polyomaviruses were the most highly abundant human viruses, and SARS-CoV-2 was rare. These findings suggest that sequencing success can be increased using methods that reduce nontarget nucleic acids in the extract, though the absolute concentration of total extracted nucleic acid, as indicated by Qubit, and targeted viruses, as indicated by dPCR, may not be directly related to targeted sequencing performance. Further, using broadly targeted sequencing panels may capture viral diversity but risks losing signals for specific low-abundance viruses. Overall, this study highlights the importance of aligning wet lab and bioinformatic methods with specific goals when employing probe-capture enrichment for human virus sequencing from wastewater.
Publisher
Environmental Science & Technology
Published On
May 01, 2024
Authors
Minxi Jiang, Audrey L. W. Wang, Nicholas A. Be, Nisha Mulakken, Kara L. Nelson, Rose S. Kantor
Tags
Wastewater sequencing
Probe-capture enrichment
Virus concentration methods
Innovaprep ultrafiltration
Human viral diversity
Sequencing sensitivity
SARS-CoV-2 detection
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