Department of Genetics, Microbiology and Statistics, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
The Water Research Institute, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
J Appl Microbiol. 2019 Mar;126(3):701-717. doi: 10.1111/jam.14112. Epub 2019 Jan 2.
The objective of this review is to assess the current state of knowledge of pathogens, general faecal indicators and human-specific microbial source tracking markers in sewage. Most of the microbes present in sewage are from the microbiota of the human gut, including pathogens. Bacteria and viruses are the most abundant groups of microbes in the human gut microbiota. Most reports on this topic show that raw sewage microbiological profiles reflect the human gut microbiota. Human and animal faeces share many commensal microbes as well as pathogens. Faecal-orally transmitted pathogens constitute a serious public health problem that can be minimized through sanitation. Assessing both the sanitation processes and the contribution of sewage to the faecal contamination of water bodies requires knowledge of the content of pathogens in sewage, microbes indicating general faecal contamination and microbes that are only present in human faecal remains, which are known as the human-specific microbial source-tracking (MST) markers. Detection of pathogens would be the ideal option for managing sanitation and determining the microbiological quality of waters contaminated by sewage; but at present, this is neither practical nor feasible in routine testing. Traditionally, faecal indicator bacteria have been used as surrogate indicators of general faecal residues. However, in many water management circumstances, it becomes necessary to detect both the origin of faecal contamination, for which MST is paramount, and live micro-organisms, for which molecular methods are not suitable. The presence and concentrations of pathogens, general faecal indicators and human-specific MST markers most frequently reported in different areas of the world are summarized in this review.
本次综述旨在评估当前污水中病原体、一般粪便指示物和人类特异性微生物溯源标记物的知识现状。污水中存在的大多数微生物都来自人类肠道微生物群,包括病原体。细菌和病毒是人类肠道微生物群中最丰富的微生物群。关于这个主题的大多数报告都表明,原始污水微生物特征反映了人类肠道微生物群。人类和动物粪便具有许多共生微生物以及病原体。粪口传播病原体构成了严重的公共卫生问题,可以通过卫生措施将其最小化。评估卫生处理过程以及污水对水体粪便污染的贡献,需要了解污水中病原体、指示一般粪便污染的微生物以及仅存在于人类粪便中的微生物的含量,这些微生物被称为人类特异性微生物溯源(MST)标记物。病原体的检测将是管理卫生和确定受污水污染的水的微生物质量的理想选择;但目前,在常规检测中,这既不实际也不可行。传统上,粪便指示细菌被用作一般粪便残留的替代指示物。然而,在许多水管理情况下,有必要检测粪便污染的来源,而 MST 则是至关重要的,还需要检测活微生物,而分子方法不适合检测活微生物。本文总结了在世界不同地区最常报道的病原体、一般粪便指示物和人类特异性 MST 标记物的存在和浓度。