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Article Abstract

Human sewage is the main source of contamination of environmental waters with human enteric viruses, that can contaminate food such as shellfish. Metagenomic represents a new way of analyzing viral diversity through an a priori massive parallel sequencing approach. However, the precise identification of enteric viruses in sewage or shellfish matrices, is still challenging due to the low viral load, large diversity of viral genera and the large amounts of matrix masking viral sequences. This work compared three commercial kits using capture-based enrichment during the library preparation, for the diversity of detected enteric viruses and for the identification of viral strains in sewage and shellfish samples, focusing on four families impacting human health. Triplicate libraries were prepared for each sample and each kit. All three kits allowed the characterization of a variety of viral genera. In sewage samples, a large number of long contigs was obtained allowing a precise identification of more than 35 strains. In shellfish samples, long contigs were rarer but allowed the identification of one human astrovirus and one norovirus strains. Of the tested kits, one displayed lower variation between replicates, allowed to sequence a higher diversity of viruses from the four families of interest and yielded a higher number of nearly-whole genomes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2025.118417DOI Listing

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