Abstract

BackgroundThe enteric viruses shed by different populations can be influenced by multiple factors including access to clean drinking water. We describe here the eukaryotic viral genomes in the feces of Ethiopian children participating in a clean water intervention trial.Methodology/principal findingsFecal samples from 269 children with a mean age of 2.7 years were collected from 14 villages in the Amhara region of Ethiopia, half of which received a new hand-dug water well. Feces from these villages were then analyzed in 29 sample pools using viral metagenomics. A total of 127 different viruses belonging to 3 RNA and 3 DNA viral families were detected. Picornaviridae family sequence reads were the most commonly found, originating from 14 enterovirus and 6 parechovirus genotypes plus multiple members of four other picornavirus genera (cosaviruses, saliviruses, kobuviruses, and hepatoviruses). Picornaviruses with nearly identical capsid VP1 were detected in different pools reflecting recent spread of these viral strains. Next in read frequencies and positive pools were sequences from the Caliciviridae family including noroviruses GI and GII and sapoviruses. DNA viruses from multiple genera of the Parvoviridae family were detected (bocaviruses 1–4, bufavirus 3, and dependoparvoviruses), together with four species of adenoviruses and common anelloviruses shedding. RNA in the order Picornavirales and CRESS-DNA viral genomes, possibly originating from intestinal parasites or dietary sources, were also characterized. No significant difference was observed between the number of mammalian viruses shed from children from villages with and without a new water well.ConclusionsWe describe an approach to estimate the efficacy of potentially virus transmission-reducing interventions and the first complete (DNA and RNA viruses) description of the enteric viromes of East African children. A wide diversity of human enteric viruses was found in both intervention and control groups. Mammalian enteric virome diversity was not reduced in children from villages with a new water well. This population-based sampling also provides a baseline of the enteric viruses present in Northern Ethiopia against which to compare future viromes.

Highlights

  • Limited access to clean drinking water is an enduring health hazard that can exacerbate enteric and malnutrition problems

  • We describe here the eukaryotic viral genomes in the feces of Ethiopian children participating in a clean water intervention trial

  • We describe an approach to estimate the efficacy of potentially virus transmission-reducing interventions and the first complete (DNA and RNA viruses) description of the enteric viromes

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Summary

Introduction

Limited access to clean drinking water is an enduring health hazard that can exacerbate enteric and malnutrition problems. Diarrhea remains one of the leading causes of mortality in children from low and medium income countries [1]. Clean water and sanitation play an essential role in protecting human health during crisis and disease outbreaks. According to a WHO/UNICEF 2014 report, clean water sources were not available in 58% of Ethiopian rural areas. A National Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Inventory from 2012 reported that only 32% of health facilities in Ethiopia have access to safe water. In Ethiopia, the children under five had a mortality rate of 59 deaths per 1,000 live births and diarrhea was the third leading cause of mortality in 2015 [2,3,4,5]

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