4.3 Article

Concentration of Enteric Viruses in Large Volumes of Water Using a Cartridge-Type Mixed Cellulose Ester Membrane

Journal

FOOD AND ENVIRONMENTAL VIROLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 7-13

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12560-014-9169-x

Keywords

Virus detection; Poliovirus; Murine norovirus; Environmental water samples; Virus concentration

Funding

  1. Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (CREST) of the Japan Science and Technology Corporation (JST)
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H02273] Funding Source: KAKEN

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A viral adsorption-elution method using a flat/disk-type electronegative membrane (diameter of 47-90 mm) has been widely utilized to concentrate viruses in relatively small volumes of water (up to 10 L) due to limited filtration area. In the present study, we aimed to develop a virus concentration method that is based on the same principle and yet allows concentration of large volumes of water using a cartridge-type electronegative membrane. We modified two electronegative membrane-based methods for this purpose (i.e., Mg2+ method and Al3+ method) and determined recovery efficiencies of poliovirus and murine norovirus inoculated in water samples. The virus recovery efficiency of the Al3+ method substantially decreased as the volume of water sample increased. In contrast, Mg2+ method showed stable virus recovery efficiencies (10-54 %) even when 40 to 1,000 L of river and tap water samples were processed. The volume of the concentrate (400 mL) can be further reduced to 1.5 mL by a Centricon plus-70 centrifugal ultrafiltration device with overall recovery efficiencies of 8.8-16 %. Our results demonstrated that the newly developed virus concentration method enables detection of as low as 10(1) copies/L of viruses in water samples.

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