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Waterborne Human Pathogenic Viruses in Complex Microbial Communities: Environmental Implication on Virus Infectivity, Persistence, and Disinfection

Mengyang Zhang, Nihal Altan‐Bonnet, Yun Shen, Danmeng Shuai

2022Environmental Science & Technology44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Waterborne human pathogenic viruses challenge global health and economy. Viruses were long believed to transmit among hosts as individual, free particles. However, recent evidence indicates that viruses also transmit in populations, so-called en bloc transmission, by either interacting with coexisting bacteria, free-living amoebas, and other higher organisms through endosymbiosis and surface binding, or by being clustered inside membrane-bound vesicles or simply self-aggregating with themselves. En bloc transmission of viruses and virus-microbiome interactions could enable viruses to enhance their infectivity, increase environmental persistence, and resist inactivation from disinfection. Overlooking this type of transmission and virus-microbiome interactions may underestimate the environmental and public health risks of the viruses. We herein provide a critical perspective on waterborne human pathogenic viruses in complex microbial communities to elucidate the environmental implication of virus-microbiome interactions on virus infectivity, persistence, and disinfection. This perspective also provides insights on advancing disinfection and sanitation guidelines and regulations to protect the public health.

Topics & Concepts

InfectivityHuman viromeMicrobiomeBiologyVirusTransmission (telecommunications)Bacterial virusHuman healthPersistence (discontinuity)VirologyMicrobiologyMetagenomicsBacteriophageEnvironmental healthGeneticsMedicineGeneEngineeringElectrical engineeringGeotechnical engineeringEscherichia coliBacteriophages and microbial interactionsRespiratory viral infections researchViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
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