Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.104, No.10, 4533-4545, 2020
Analysis of microbial contamination of household water purifiers
Household water purifiers are increasingly used to treat drinking water at the household level, but their influence on the microbiological safety of drinking water has rarely been assessed. In this study, representative purifiers, based on different filtering processes, were analyzed for their impact on effluent water quality. The results showed that purifiers reduced chemical qualities such as turbidity and free chlorine. However, a high level of bacteria (10(2)-10(6) CFU/g) was detected at each stage of filtration using a traditional culture-dependent method, whereas quantitative PCR with propidium monoazide (PMA) treatment showed 10(6)-10(8) copies/L of total viable bacteria in effluent water, indicating elevated microbial contaminants after purifiers. In addition, high-throughput sequencing revealed a diverse microbial community in effluents and membranes. Proteobacteria (22.06-97.42%) was the dominant phylum found in all samples, except for purifier B, in which Melainabacteria was most abundant (65.79%). For waterborne pathogens, Escherichia coli (10(0)-10(6) copies/g) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (10(0)-10(5) copies/g) were frequently detected by qPCR. Sequencing also demonstrated the presence of E. coli (0-6.26%), Mycobacterium mucogenicum (0.01-3.46%), and P. aeruginosa (0-0.16%) in purifiers. These finding suggest that water from commonly used household purifiers still impose microbial risks to human health.
Keywords:Household treatment purifiers;Microbial contamination;Membrane filtration;Waterborne pathogens;High-throughput sequencing;PMA-qPCR