» Articles » PMID: 30594081

Flow Cytometry Applications in Water Treatment, Distribution, and Reuse: A Review

Overview
Journal Water Res
Date 2018 Dec 30
PMID 30594081
Citations 22
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Ensuring safe and effective water treatment, distribution, and reuse requires robust methods for characterizing and monitoring waterborne microbes. Methods widely used today can be limited by low sensitivity, high labor and time requirements, susceptibility to interference from inhibitory compounds, and difficulties in distinguishing between viable and non-viable cells. Flow cytometry (FCM) has recently gained attention as an alternative approach that can overcome many of these challenges. This article critically and systematically reviews for the first time recent literature on applications of FCM in water treatment, distribution, and reuse. In the review, we identify and examine nearly 300 studies published from 2000 to 2018 that illustrate the benefits and challenges of using FCM for assessing source-water quality and impacts of treatment-plant discharge on receiving waters, wastewater treatment, drinking water treatment, and drinking water distribution. We then discuss options for combining FCM with other indicators of water quality and address several topics that cut across nearly all applications reviewed. Finally, we identify priority areas in which more work is needed to realize the full potential of this approach. These include optimizing protocols for FCM-based analysis of waterborne viruses, optimizing protocols for specifically detecting target pathogens, automating sample handling and preparation to enable real-time FCM, developing computational tools to assist data analysis, and improving standards for instrumentation, methods, and reporting requirements. We conclude that while more work is needed to realize the full potential of FCM in water treatment, distribution, and reuse, substantial progress has been made over the past two decades. There is now a sufficiently large body of research documenting successful applications of FCM that the approach could reasonably and realistically see widespread adoption as a routine method for water quality assessment.

Citing Articles

Flow Cytometric Detection of Waterborne Bacteria Metabolic Response to Anthropogenic Chemical Inputs to Aquatic Ecosystems.

Jenkins J, Mize S, Johnson D, Brown B Cells. 2025; 14(5).

PMID: 40072081 PMC: 11898781. DOI: 10.3390/cells14050352.


Assessing microbial growth in drinking water using nucleic acid content and flow cytometry fingerprinting.

Claveau L, Hudson N, Jeffrey P, Hassard F iScience. 2025; 27(12):111511.

PMID: 39759014 PMC: 11699291. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.111511.


A Sensitive Fluorescence Analysis Method of Pathogenic Microorganisms Based on Silicon Photomultiplier.

Chen Y, Dai L, Zhang F, Zhao T, Jin S J Fluoresc. 2024; .

PMID: 39180572 DOI: 10.1007/s10895-024-03872-w.


Efficacy and Mechanism of Antibiotic Resistance Gene Degradation and Cell Membrane Damage during Ultraviolet Advanced Oxidation Processes.

Wang J, Huo L, Bian K, He H, Dodd M, Pinto A ACS ES T Water. 2024; 4(6):2746-2755.

PMID: 38903200 PMC: 11186015. DOI: 10.1021/acsestwater.4c00350.


Recent advances in microfluidic-based spectroscopic approaches for pathogen detection.

Hussain M, He X, Wang C, Wang Y, Wang J, Chen M Biomicrofluidics. 2024; 18(3):031505.

PMID: 38855476 PMC: 11162289. DOI: 10.1063/5.0204987.