International Airport Wastewater as a Sentinel Site for Genomic Surveillance of Human Viruses and Bacteriophages
Ana Paula Assad de Carvalho, Mariana Silva Almada, Cíntia Dutra Leal, Josiane Fernandes, Maria Cristina Costa, Vagner de Souza Fonseca, Marta Giovanetti, Luiz Carlos Junior Alcantara, Juliana Calábria de AraújoAirports are strategic targets for wastewater-based epidemiology because they concentrate highly mobile populations and may provide early signals of pathogen circulation. However, metagenomic investigations of airport wastewater remain limited, particularly in South America. Here, we present one of the first hybrid-capture target-enriched metagenomic investigations of airport wastewater in Brazil, integrating the detection of human-associated viruses and bacteriophage-derived host signatures to evaluate airports as sentinel surveillance sites. Seven untreated wastewater samples collected from a major Brazilian airport between December 2021 and March 2023 were concentrated, subjected to nucleic acid extraction, and analyzed using hybrid-capture target-enriched next-generation sequencing. Taxonomic analysis identified 615 viral and bacteriophage-associated taxa, including 440 viruses and 175 bacteriophages. Among the viral fraction, 21 human-associated viral taxa representing eight viral families were selected for detailed analysis. Norovirus GII was detected in all samples, while Mamastrovirus 1 and JC polyomavirus were detected in six of seven samples. SARS-CoV-2 and dengue virus type 1 were simultaneously detected in the March, 2023 sample. The bacteriophage fraction comprised 47 host-associated phage groups, with Streptococcus-associated phages predominating across samples. These findings demonstrate that airport wastewater can capture diverse human viral and bacteriophage-derived signatures associated with population mobility, supporting its application in environmental genomic surveillance and early-warning systems for emerging and circulating pathogens.