Litcius/Paper detail

Municipal Wastewater Surveillance Revealed a High Community Disease Burden of a Rarely Reported and Possibly Subclinical <i>Salmonella enterica</i> Serovar Derby Strain

Sabrina Diemert, Tao Yan

2020Applied and Environmental Microbiology38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) has been conventionally used to analyze community health via the detection of chemicals, such as legal and illicit drugs; however, municipal wastewater contains microbiological determinants of health and disease as well, including enteric pathogens. Here, we demonstrate that WBE can be used to examine subclinical community salmonellosis patterns. Derby was the most abundant Salmonella serovar detected in Hawaii wastewater over a year-long sampling study, with few corresponding clinical cases. Comparative genomics analyses indicate that the normally rare strain of S . Derby found in wastewater has a unique combination of genes which allow it to persist as a subclinical infection without producing symptoms of severe gastroenteritis. This study shows that WBE can be used to explore trends in community infectious disease patterns which may not be reflected in clinical monitoring, shedding light on overall enteric disease burden and rates of asymptomatic cases.

Topics & Concepts

Salmonella entericaSubclinical infectionSerotypeSalmonellaDisease surveillanceStrain (injury)MicrobiologyDiseaseBiologyEnvironmental healthVirologyBacteriaMedicineInternal medicineGeneticsAnatomySalmonella and Campylobacter epidemiologyVibrio bacteria research studiesFood Safety and Hygiene
Municipal Wastewater Surveillance Revealed a High Community Disease Burden of a Rarely Reported and Possibly Subclinical <i>Salmonella enterica</i> Serovar Derby Strain | Litcius