Comparison of behaviors of two surrogates for pathogenic waterborne viruses, bacteriophages Qβ and MS2, during the aluminum coagulation process.

2009 
Abstract Differences in the behaviors of two surrogates for pathogenic waterborne viruses, F-specific RNA bacteriophages Qβ and MS2, were investigated during the coagulation process by using river water spiked with these bacteriophages. The particle size and electrophoretic mobility of Qβ and MS2 were similar, but the removal performances of infectious Qβ and MS2, as measured by a plaque forming unit (PFU) method, differed markedly during the coagulation process. The removal ratio of the infectious Qβ concentration was approximately 2 log higher than that of the infectious MS2 concentration at all coagulant doses tested. The total Qβ and MS2 bacteriophage concentrations, which were measured by a real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method and represented the total number of bacteriophages regardless of their infectivity, were similar after the coagulation process, suggesting that the behaviors of Qβ and MS2 as particles were similar during the coagulation process. The difference between total concentration and infectious concentration indicated that some of the bacteriophages were probably inactivated during the coagulation process. This difference was larger for Qβ than MS2, meaning that Qβ was more sensitive to the virucidal activity of the aluminum coagulant. Analysis of the PFU and real-time RT-PCR findings together suggested that the difference in removal performances of Qβ and MS2 during the coagulation process was probably caused by differences not in the extent of bacteriophage entrapment in the aluminum floc particles but in the sensitivity to virucidal activity of the aluminum coagulant.
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