Unveiling the global urban virome through wastewater metagenomics
Nature Communications
Oglądaj/ Open
Data
2025Autor
Worp, Nathalie
Nieuwenhuijse, David F.
Izquierdo-Lara, Ray W.
Schapendonk, Claudia M. E.
Brinch, Christian
Jensen, Emilie Egholm Bruun
Munk, Patrick
Hendriksen, Rene S.
Aarestrup, Frank
Oude Munnink, Bas B.
Koopmans, Marion P. G.
de Graaf, Miranda
Global Sewage Surveillance Consortium; Dariusz Wasyl
Metadane
Pokaż pełny rekordStreszczenie
Understanding global viral dynamics is critical for public health. Traditional
surveillance focuses on individual pathogens and symptomatic cases, which
may miss asymptomatic infections or newly emerging viruses, delaying
detection and response. Wastewater-based epidemiology has been used to
track pathogens through targeted molecular assays, but its reliance on pre-
defined targets limits detection of the full viral spectrum. Here, we analyse
longitudinal wastewater samples from 62 cities across six continents
(2017–2019) using metagenomics and capture-based sequencing with probes
targeting viruses associated with gastrointestinal disease. We detect over 2500
viral species spanning 122 families, many with human, animal, or plant health
relevance. The bacteriophage family Microviridae and plant virus family Vir-
gaviridae dominate the metagenomic dataset, while Astroviridae and Picor-
naviridae prevail in the capture-based sequence dataset. Virus distributions
are broadly similar across continents at the family and genus levels, yet distinct
city-level fingerprints reveal geographical and temporal variation, enabling
spatiotemporal surveillance of viruses such as astroviruses and enteroviruses.
Global wastewater-based epidemiology enables early detection of emerging
viruses, including Echovirus 30 in Europe and Tomato brown rugose fruit virus.
These findings highlight the potential of wastewater sequencing for the early
detection of emerging viruses and population-wide virome monitoring across
diverse hosts.
Zbiory
- Publikacje [757]
