Science Inventory

Human Mitochondrial DNA and Endogenous Bacterial Surrogates for Risk Assessment of Graywater Reuse

Citation:

Zimmerman, B., N. Ashbolt, J. Garland, S. Keely, AND D. Wendell. Human Mitochondrial DNA and Endogenous Bacterial Surrogates for Risk Assessment of Graywater Reuse. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 48(14):7993-8002, (2014).

Impact/Purpose:

To identify better metrics by which to assess microbial risk removal during graywater treatment

Description:

Previous graywater risk assessment studies have focused on fecal contamination, yet the low density of fecal indicators may not provide the most useful approach to assess pathogen removal during graywater treatment. In this study, we employed high throughput bacterial sequencing and qPCR to elucidate potential microbial surrogates in wastewater sourced from an industrial laundry. In addition, we explored human mitochondrial DNA (HmtDNA) as a new, potentially more reliable molecular marker, because it can be unambiguously sourced, has a high copy number per cell, and is persistent when released from cells with no self-replication in graywater. Pyrosequencing and qPCR revealed that laundry water microbiota was dominated by the skin-associated bacteria Staphylococcus, Corynebacterium, and Propionibacterium (6.5, 5.7, 5.4 log10 copies/100mL respectively). While HmtDNA was less abundant (2.8 log10 copies/100mL) it showed a strong positive correlation with the opportunistic pathogen Staphylococcus aureus (r = 0.54, P = 3.2 x 10-4) and closely followed a first order exponential decay model (R2 = 0.98), remaining detectable in stored laundry graywater for up to six days at 20ºC. Based on abundance and persistence, we propose HmtDNA and total Staphylococcus as future laundry graywater treatment surrogates to potentially assess a wide dynamic range of pathogen removal.

URLs/Downloads:

es501659r   Exit EPA's Web Site

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:06/16/2014
Record Last Revised:09/25/2014
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 287419