University of Alberta: Some E. coli bacteria not only survive but thrive in wastewater treatment plants: study
A strain of Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria is not only surviving, but thriving, in wastewater treatment plants, according to recent research from a University of Alberta-led team that is now working to understand their potentially harmful impact on human health.
Most E. coli are destroyed by chlorine, oxygenation and other treatments in sewage plants, but the team found particular strains of pathogenic E. coli are left relatively unscathed.
“It’s like they’re wearing microbial Kevlar,” said principal author Norman Neumann, professor and vice-dean of the School of Public Health. “Genetically they’re very different and they are very adapted.”
Although most strains of E. coli do not cause harm to humans, some have been linked to global increases in illnesses such as urinary tract infections, bloodstream infections and even meningitis, Neumann said. Some are highly pathogenic and are resistant to antibiotic drugs, and some are even resistant to heating at 60 degrees Celsius—a potential worry for contamination of food during processing, he warned.
“Our paper is the first demonstration to show that what is coming out of a wastewater treatment plant and the survivors are potentially quite pathogenic and perhaps causing diseases that we haven’t typically thought about as being water-transmitted in the past,” Neumann said.
The study team isolated and analyzed the genetics of E. coli from raw and treated sewage samples from municipal wastewater treatment plants across Alberta.
Epidemiological studies needed
Neumann is now encouraging organizations such as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to carry out large epidemiological studies looking for broader patterns of illness in populations who are exposed to treated water.
“We need to understand the true scope of this problem by looking for manifestations of disease that go beyond the classic waterborne E. coli illness symptoms that we think of, such as diarrhea and gastroenteritis,” he said.
Neumann noted that more study is needed to determine whether these pathogenic E. coli are present in drinking water, or whether people are mainly exposed by swimming in bodies of water downstream from treatment plants.
While antibiotics, hospitals and vaccines are important public health interventions, they are not as important as water treatment, he said.
“When you realize that drinking water treatment and sewage sanitation are the single biggest interventions we have to control infectious disease, and these bugs are breaching that barrier, what does it mean?” he asked. “Could there be a lot more disease being passed by water than we realize?”
Protecting public health
Neumann’s research team is now looking for ways to improve disinfectant treatments for sewage, such as higher doses of chlorine, longer exposure to ultraviolet light, irradiation or higher heat treatment, while acknowledging that each new process would be costly and might turn out to be counterproductive.
“Could it be that our processes of treating wastewater are leading to the emergence of these water-treatment-resistant pathogens?” he asked. “Can we damage these E. coli enough so they can no longer evolve and repair? Or would increased treatment exacerbate the problem (by causing them to adapt again)?
“We know that nature usually responds to continued pressures that we place on it,” he said.
The study was funded by Alberta Innovates, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the City of Calgary. The team included experts from the U of A’s Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences and the University of Calgary.