Article
Evaluation of methods used to concentrate and detect hepatitis A virus in water samples
Registro en:
VILLAR, Livia Melo et al. Evaluation of methods used to concentrate and detect hepatitis A virus in water samples. Journal of Virological Methods, v. 137, p. 169-176, 2006.
0166-0934
10.1016/j.jviromet.2006.06.008
10.1016/j.jviromet.2006.06.008
1879-0984
Autor
Villar, Livia Melo
Paula, Vanessa Salete de
Mendes, Leonardo Diniz
Lampe, Elisabeth
Gaspar, Ana Maria Coimbra
Resumen
Two adsorption-elution concentration methods, both involving negatively charged membranes, were evaluated in order to monitor hepatitis A virus (HAV) contamination in tap, river, mineral and coastal water samples: elution with urea-arginine phosphate buffer/reconcentration with magnesium chloride (method 1); and sodium hydroxide elution/reconcentration with a commercial concentrator (method 2). Nested (qualitative) reverse transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) and real-time (quantitative) RT-PCR were used to detect and quantify HAV RNA in concentrated water samples. For concentrating HAV, method 1 was found to be the most suitable for tap water and method 2 most suitable for mineral water. HAV inoculated experimentally was detected in river water samples by both methods and in coastal water samples by neither method. The detection limits were 6 x 10(9) g equiv./ml for qualitative PCR and 60 g equiv./ml for quantitative PCR. In a field application study, HAV was detected in 20% of river and tap water samples but not in coastal or mineral water samples. River water samples contained subgenotype IA, and tap water samples contained subgenotype IB. It is concluded that, although influencing qualitative PCR, the concentration method does not affect quantitative PCR, which could therefore be used for all types of water samples. Both techniques are recommended for detecting HAV in environmental water samples. 2025-01-01