Skip to main content

This is a preprint.

It has not yet been peer reviewed by a journal.

The National Library of Medicine is running a pilot to include preprints that result from research funded by NIH in PMC and PubMed.

medRxiv logoLink to medRxiv
[Preprint]. 2023 Jun 1:2023.05.31.23290781. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.05.31.23290781

Geospatially-resolved public-health surveillance via wastewater sequencing

Braden T Tierney, Jonathan Foox, Krista A Ryon, Daniel Butler, Namita Damle, Benjamin G Young, Christopher Mozsary, Kristina M Babler, Xue Yin, Yamina Carattini, David Andrews, Natasha Schaefer Solle, Naresh Kumar, Bhavarth Shukla, Dusica Vidovic, Benjamin Currall, Sion L Williams, Stephan C Schürer, Mario Stevenson, Ayaaz Amirali, Cynthia C Beaver, Erin Kobetz, Melinda M Boone, Brian Reding, Jennifer Laine, Samuel Comerford, Walter E Lamar, John J Tallon, Jeremy Wain Hirschberg, Jacqueline Proszynski, Mark E Sharkey, George M Church, George S Grills, Helena M Solo-Gabriele, Christopher E Mason
PMCID: PMC10312847  PMID: 37398062

Abstract

Wastewater, which contains everything from pathogens to pollutants, is a geospatially-and temporally-linked microbial fingerprint of a given population. As a result, it can be leveraged for monitoring multiple dimensions of public health across locales and time. Here, we integrate targeted and bulk RNA sequencing (n=1,419 samples) to track the viral, bacterial, and functional content over geospatially distinct areas within Miami Dade County from 2020-2022. First, we used targeted amplicon sequencing (n=966) to track diverse SARS-CoV-2 variants across space and time, and we found a tight correspondence with clinical caseloads from University students (N = 1,503) and Miami-Dade County hospital patients (N = 3,939 patients), as well as an 8-day earlier detection of the Delta variant in wastewater vs. in patients. Additionally, in 453 metatranscriptomic samples, we demonstrate that different wastewater sampling locations have clinically and public-health-relevant microbiota that vary as a function of the size of the human population they represent. Through assembly, alignment-based, and phylogenetic approaches, we also detect multiple clinically important viruses (e.g., norovirus ) and describe geospatial and temporal variation in microbial functional genes that indicate the presence of pollutants. Moreover, we found distinct profiles of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes and virulence factors across campus buildings, dorms, and hospitals, with hospital wastewater containing a significant increase in AMR abundance. Overall, this effort lays the groundwork for systematic characterization of wastewater to improve public health decision making and a broad platform to detect emerging pathogens.

Full Text Availability

The license terms selected by the author(s) for this preprint version do not permit archiving in PMC. The full text is available from the preprint server.


Articles from medRxiv are provided here courtesy of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Preprints

RESOURCES