Metagenomic Evaluation of the Highly Abundant Human
Gut Bacteriophage CrAssphage for Source Tracking of Human Fecal Pollution
Posted on 2014-10-14 - 00:00
Recently, a highly abundant and widespread
bacteriophage, named
crAssphage, was identified in the human gut. Here, 86 publically available
metagenomes were surveyed to determine the presence and abundance
of crAssphage in various environments and to identify its utility
for source tracking of human fecal pollution. CrAssphage was found
to be highly abundant in sewage and biosolids from the United States
and Europe and less abundant in sewage from Asia and Africa. CrAssphage
was not definitively identified in other samples, including animal
fecal material, with the exception of bat guano. Approximately half
of mapped reads in the bat guano metagenome clustered to orf00045
in the phage genome, suggesting homology to a closely related phage.
These results indicate the potential utility of a crAssphage-based
marker for source tracking of human fecal waste and highlight the
utility of metagenomic approaches for initial identification and verification
of fecal source tracking markers.
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Stachler, Elyse; Bibby, Kyle (2016). Metagenomic Evaluation of the Highly Abundant Human
Gut Bacteriophage CrAssphage for Source Tracking of Human Fecal Pollution. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/ez500266s