(Press-News.org) Washington, DC-- March 2, 2021 -- Detecting COVID-19 outbreaks before they spread could help contain the virus and curb new cases within a community. This week in mSystems, an open-access Journal of the American Society for Microbiology, researchers from the University of California San Diego describe a mostly-automated early alert system that uses high-throughput analysis of wastewater samples to identify buildings where new COVID-19 cases have emerged--even before infected people develop symptoms.
The approach is fast, cost-effective, and sensitive enough to detect a single case of COVID-19 in a building that houses nearly 500 people, said UC San Diego environmental engineer and first author Smruthi Karthikeyan, Ph.D., who led the design of the system. "It really lets us get a handle on new outbreaks before they get worse," she said.
Previous studies have shown that analyzing viral concentrations in sewage can accurately predict trends in clinical diagnoses up to a week in advance. However, conventional approaches to wastewater surveillance are laborious and time-consuming, said Karthikeyan.
To get around these bottlenecks, she said, the UCSD team designed a system from scratch that automates most of the analysis. Automation makes it possible to get results quickly, and the system is already watching for community outbreaks in San Diego, Karthikeyan said. Every morning by 10:30 am, UCSD researchers collect wastewater samples from nearly 100 stations, representing every building on campus and a local hospital.
Back at the lab, a robotic platform can process 24 samples in just 40 minutes. Then an automated, high-throughput tool extracts RNA from the samples and uses PCR to search for three telltale genes associated with SARS-CoV-2. If the sequencing reveals all 3 genes, the sample is classified as positive. By early afternoon, the researchers can update the data on an online dashboard that shows where new cases have emerged.
Such a surveillance system is only useful if it has a quick turnaround time, Karthikeyan said, and "there's no way we could get all those samples done on the same day unless we automated." And because every step is automated, she said, the process isn't vulnerable to human error.
A positive test also triggers an alert that is sent to residents of the building where the sample was collected, and they test themselves using kits from a vending machine. People who then test positive are quarantined, and the process is repeated, said Karthikeyan, a postdoctoral researcher in the lab of microbiologist Rob Knight, Ph.D., whose research uses computational techniques to study the ecosystems of the body.
After a pilot experiment showed that the system reliably reported new cases in individual buildings, the group scaled up and began surveillance of the more than 2 million people who live in San Diego county. "Southern California has a lot of cases, and we're bound to see it in the sewage," said Karthikeyan.
In the post-pandemic future, Karthikeyan predicted, a cost-effective and fast surveillance system could be particularly useful in tracking viral outbreaks in vulnerable communities with limited access to healthcare.
INFORMATION:
The American Society for Microbiology is one of the largest professional societies dedicated to the life sciences and is composed of 30,000 scientists and health practitioners. ASM's mission is to promote and advance the microbial sciences.
ASM advances the microbial sciences through conferences, publications, certifications, educational opportunities and advocacy efforts. It enhances laboratory capacity around the globe through training and resources. It provides a network for scientists in academia, industry and clinical settings. Additionally, ASM promotes a deeper understanding of the microbial sciences to diverse audiences.
Today, we can say without a shadow of doubt that an alternative to fossil fuels is needed. Fossil fuels are not only non-renewable sources of energy but also among the leading causes of global warming and air pollution. Thus, many scientists worldwide have their hopes placed on what they regard as the fuel of tomorrow: hydrogen (H2). Although H2 is a clean fuel with incredibly high energy density, efficiently generating large amounts of it remains a difficult technical challenge.
Water splitting--the breaking of water molecules--is among the most explored methods to produce H2. While there are many ways ...
Pesticides used in forestry may threaten species in downstream rivers and estuaries, but little is known about the extent to which this occurs. A new study by researchers at Portland State University found mussels, clams and oysters in watersheds along the Oregon Coast are exposed to pesticides used in managing forests. The results of this study, published in the journal Toxics, have implications for developing better forest management practices that are less likely to negatively affect aquatic life.
The study was led by Kaegan Scully-Engelmeyer, PhD student in the Earth, Environment and Society program at Portland ...
The coronavirus pandemic has drawn new attention to the digital divide, as the need for online schooling and working from home has disproportionately hurt those without computer equipment and skills.
Research by Paul A. Pavlou, dean of the C. T. Bauer College of Business at the University of Houston, found that people with basic Information Technology (IT) skills - including the ability to use email, copy and paste files and work with an Excel spreadsheet - are more likely to be employed, even in jobs that aren't explicitly tied to those skills.
People with more advanced IT skills generally earned higher salaries, the researchers found. The work is described in Information Systems Research.
"Unemployment and low wages remain pressing societal challenges in the wake of increased ...
A new study has shown that gentle streams of water carrying sound and microscopic air bubbles can clean bacteria from salad leaves more effectively than current washing methods used by suppliers and consumers. As well as reducing food poisoning, the findings could reduce food waste and have implications for the growing threat of anti-microbial resistance.
Salad and leafy green vegetables may be contaminated with harmful bacteria during growing, harvesting, preparation and retail leading to outbreaks of food poisoning which may be fatal in vulnerable groups.
Because there is no cooking process to ...
Healthcare sex discrimination protections for the LGBTQ community may be expanded under the Biden Administration, including safeguards against verbal abuse, physical abuse and the denial of bedside care, according to West Virginia University College of Law experts.
In a report published in California Law Review, Professor Valarie Blake and students Ashley Stephens and Amy Post examined whether gender identity and sexual orientation should be included in healthcare sex discrimination laws, on the heels of the historic 2020 Supreme Court case Bostock v. Clayton County.
In that case, the Court ruled that sex discrimination includes gender identity and sexual orientation when it comes to employment standards. Yet the interpretation of whether ...
Scientists at the University of Bath in the UK have found a way to bind together two photons of different colours, paving the way for important advancements in quantum-electrodynamics - the field of science that describes how light and matter interact. In time, the team's findings are likely to impact developments in optical and quantum communication, and precision measurements of frequency, time and distances.
APPLE AND WAVE: THEY BOTH HAVE A MASS
An apple falling from a tree has velocity and mass, which together give it momentum. 'Apple energy' derived from motion depends on the fruit's momentum and mass.
Most people find ...
Volcanic basalt rocks in the Black Rock Desert, Utah.
If you drive south through central Utah on Interstate 15 and look west somewhere around Fillmore, you'll see smooth hills and fields of black rock. The area is, aptly, named the Black Rock Desert. It may not look like much, but you're looking at some of Utah's volcanoes.
A pair of earthquake sequences, in September 2018 and April 2019, focused scientists' attention on the Black Rock Desert. The sequences, which included the main quakes and their aftershocks, were very different from the Magna earthquake that shook the Wasatch Front in 2020 and other Utah earthquakes. The Black Rock sequences were captured ...
Since early in the pandemic, COVID-19 has been associated with heart problems, including reduced ability to pump blood and abnormal heart rhythms. But it's been an open question whether these problems are caused by the virus infecting the heart, or an inflammatory response to viral infection elsewhere in the body. Such details have implications for understanding how best to treat coronavirus infections that affect the heart.
A new study from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis provides evidence that COVID-19 patients' heart damage ...
Positive psychological effects associated with taking small doses of psychedelic drugs are likely the result of users' expectations, suggests a study published today in eLife.
The study - the largest placebo-controlled trial on psychedelics to date - used an innovative 'self-blinding citizen science' approach, where members of the public who were already microdosing implemented their own placebo control following online instructions. The results from the trial may influence future studies in real-world settings.
There has been renewed interest in studying whether psychedelic drugs may be a useful treatment for depression, addiction, obsessive-compulsive disorders and other conditions. Few small studies have previously suggested that microdoses ...
A new paper from associate professor Jiandi Wan's group in the UC Davis Department of Chemical Engineering, published in Science Advances, proposes a potential solution to dendrite growth in rechargeable lithium metal batteries. In the paper, Wan's team prove that flowing ions near the cathode can potentially expand the safety and lifespans of these next-generation rechargeable batteries.
Lithium metal batteries use lithium metal as the anode. These batteries have a high charge density and potentially double the energy of conventional lithium ion batteries, but safety is a big concern. When they charge, some ions are reduced to lithium ...