Water research | 2021

Deciphering the transfers of antibiotic resistance genes under antibiotic exposure conditions: Driven by functional modules and bacterial community.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Antibiotics can exert selective pressures on sludge as well as affect the emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). However, the underlying mechanisms of ARGs transfers are still controversial and not fully understood in sludge system. In present study, two anaerobic sequence batch reactors (ASBR) were constructed to investigate the development of ARGs exposed to two sulfonamide antibiotics (SMs, sulfadiazine SDZ and sulfamethoxazole SMX) with increasing concentrations. The abundance of corresponding ARGs and total ARGs obviously increased with presence of SMs. Functional analyses indicated that oxidative stress response, signal transduction and type IV secretion systems were triggered by SMs, which would promote ARGs transfers. Network analysis revealed 18 genera were possible hosts of ARGs, and their abundances increased with SMs. Partial least-squares path modeling suggested functional modules directly influenced mobile genetic elements (MGEs) as well as the ARGs might be driven by both functional modules and bacteria community, while bacteria community composition played a more key role. Sludge with refractory antibiotics (SDZ) may stimulate the relevant functions and shift the microbial composition to a greater extent, causing more ARGs to emerge and spread. The mechanisms of ARGs transfers are revealed from the perspective of functional modules and bacterial community in sludge system for the first time, and it could provide beneficial directions, such as oxidative stress reduction, cellular communication control, bacterial composition directional regulation, for ARGs spread controlling in the future.

Volume 205
Pages \n 117672\n
DOI 10.1016/j.watres.2021.117672
Language English
Journal Water research

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