Mad cow disease-causing  prions can survive conventional sewage treatment, according to a new study by  University of Wisconsin-Madison scientists.
  Prions — rogue misfolded  proteins that cause mad cow disease, chronic wasting disease, and its human  equivalent, variant Creutzfeldt- Jakob disease — are not degraded by standard  wastewater decontamination and can end up in fertilizers, potentially  contaminating crops.
 Prions never have been  reported in U.S. municipal sewage. But as a precaution, “we should keep prions  out of wastewater treatment plants,” said Joel Pedersen, an environmental  engineer at UW-Madison who led the study.
 Prions are notoriously  resilient to extreme heat, caustic chemicals and irradiation, but it wasn’t  known how they would fare under the standard barrage of treatments applied to  wastewater sludge.
 However, it is unlikely  the prions would be guzzled in treated tap water, expert  says.
 These findings cast doubt  on the safety of biosolids, Pedersen said, though he noted that the water  effluent was clean and prion-free.
 
Biosolids generally are  thought to lack human pathogens and to be safe for agricultural applications.  The Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District makes a fertilizer called  Milorganite from its Jones Island treatment plant’s biosolids. Madison makes its  own biosolids fertilizer, called Metrogro.
 “We’re looking at this  research and asking what we can do to improve our systems,” said Jeff Spence,  marketing director for Milorganite. “Based on the findings, there’s little or no  risk in regard to these rogue proteins as it relates to  biosolids.”
 Since prions were  restricted to the biosolids and not the water, the study “gives better  confidence that (prions) could be sequestered in matter associated with solid  materials,” and potentially removed, said Fran Kremer, a senior science adviser  for the National Risk Management Research Laboratory of the Environmental  Protection Agency, which partially funded the study.
 
