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Prevalence of Human Enteric Viruses and a Potential Indicator of Contamination in Shellfish in C hina
Author(s) -
Ming H. Xia,
Fan J. Feng,
Wu L. Jun,
Liang Y. Bo
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of food safety
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.427
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1745-4565
pISSN - 0149-6085
DOI - 10.1111/jfs.12041
Subject(s) - norovirus , astrovirus , shellfish , biology , rotavirus , virology , poliovirus , hepatitis a , sapovirus , contamination , hepatitis a virus , food contaminant , microbiology and biotechnology , food safety , virus , food science , hepatitis , fishery , aquatic animal , ecology , fish <actinopterygii>
The objectives of this study were to quantify enteric viruses in shellfish along the Chinese coast and find an indicator of viral contamination in shellfish. One hundred sixty‐two samples were collected in A ugust from 10 cities. Hepatitis A virus ( HAV ), norovirus ( NV ), rotavirus ( RV ), poliovirus ( PV ), astrovirus ( AsV ) and adenovirus ( AdV ) were detected by polymerase chain reaction ( PCR ) and confirmed by sequencing. The percentage of positive samples for each virus was as follows: HAV 5%, NV 12%, RV 7%, PV 15%, AsV 6% and AdV 9%. The six species of shellfish were contaminated with different viruses. PV showed a significant correlation with other viruses, with the exception of RV ( P < 0.05). Contamination of shellfish with human enteric viruses was common across a large geographical region of C hina, indicating a potential public health threat from seafood. The data confirm the potential to monitor the food safety of shellfish by using PV as an index of enteric virus contamination. Practical Applications Enteric viruses are one of foodborne pathogens transmitted by bivalve shellfish, which pose a severe potential risk for consumers, as well as a serious problem facing researchers. C hina leads the worldwide production of shellfish. Therefore, the safety of shellfish harvested in C hina is particularly important. Norovirus, hepatitis A virus, rotavirus, adenovirus, poliovirus and astrovirus are introduced to assess the seafood safety by documenting risks for transmission of enteric viruses in shellfish along the C hinese coast. Of which, poliovirus could be one of these potential indicator to present human enteric virus contamination in the countries where oral polio vaccines are used.