Elevated Fecal Mitochondrial DNA from Symptomatic
Norovirus Infections Suggests Potential Health Relevance of Human
Mitochondrial DNA in Fecal Source Tracking
posted on 2022-05-18, 21:45authored byKevin
J. Zhu, Brittany Suttner, Jackie Knee, Drew Capone, Christine L. Moe, Christine E. Stauber, Kostas T. Konstantinidis, Thomas E. Wallach, Amy J. Pickering, Joe Brown
An end goal of fecal
source tracking (FST) is to provide information
on risk of transmission of waterborne illnesses associated with fecal
contamination. Ideally, concentrations of FST markers in ambient waters
would reflect exposure risk. Human mtDNA is an FST marker that is
exclusively human in origin and may be elevated in feces of individuals
experiencing gastrointestinal inflammation. In this study, we examined
whether human mtDNA is elevated in fecal samples from individuals
with symptomatic norovirus infections using samples from the United
States (US), Mozambique, and Bangladesh. We quantified hCYTB484 (human
mtDNA) and HF183/BacR287 (human-associated Bacteroides) FST markers using droplet digital polymerase chain reaction. We
observed the greatest difference in concentrations of hCYTB484 when
comparing samples from individuals with symptomatic norovirus infections
versus individuals without norovirus infections or diarrhea symptoms:
log10 increase of 1.42 in US samples (3,820% increase, p-value = 0.062), 0.49 in Mozambique (308% increase, p-value = 0.061), and 0.86 in Bangladesh (648% increase, p-value = 0.035). We did not observe any trends in concentrations
of HF183/BacR287 in the same samples. These results suggest concentrations
of fecal mtDNA may increase during symptomatic norovirus infection
and that mtDNA in environmental samples may represent an unambiguously
human source-tracking marker that correlates with enteric pathogen
exposure risk.