Abstract

Free-living amoebae (FLA) are ubiquitous protozoa in aquatic/soil habitats and known to resist various disinfection methods commonly used in drinking and wastewater treatment plants. Reoviruses are emerging as useful infectious enteric virus indicators of wastewater treatment efficacy. The possible enhanced protection FLA may provide reoviruses, however, has not been previously described. Using an infectious clinical reovirus isolate in coculture with three FLA, namely, Vermamoeba vermiformis, Acanthamoeba polyphaga, and Willaertia magna, we followed reovirus persistence (by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR)) and infectivity (TCID50). Virions present in samples persisted over the experimental time period, with most virions remaining infectious. Surprisingly, electron microscopy revealed virions accumulated within the nucleus of amoebae. The current work appears to be the first report of reovirus being internalized within FLA and remaining infectious, providing a previously unreported environmental reservoir and potential mode of dissemination. FLA also appeared to be providing some logs in protection to internalized viruses during UV irradiation, which if not accounted for when determining UV dosage needed for sufficient disinfection may result in unintentional release of pathogens into surrounding water systems.

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