# | Rank | Similarity | Title + Abs. | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 7600 | 0 | 1.0000 | Elimination of antibiotic resistance genes and control of horizontal transfer risk by UV-based treatment of drinking water: A mini review. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) have been recognized as one of the biggest public health issues of the 21st century. Both ARB and ARGs have been determined in water after treatment with conventional disinfectants. Ultraviolet (UV) technology has been seen growth in application to disinfect the water. However, UV method alone is not adequate to degrade ARGs in water. Researchers are investigating the combination of UV with other oxidants (chlorine, hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)), peroxymonosulfate (PMS), and photocatalysts) to harness the high reactivity of produced reactive species (Cl·, ClO·, Cl(2)·(-), ·OH, and SO(4)·(-)) in such processes with constituents of cell (e.g., deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and its components) in order to increase the degradation efficiency of ARGs. This paper briefly reviews the current status of different UV-based treatments (UV/chlorination, UV/H(2)O(2), UV/PMS, and UV-photocatalysis) to degrade ARGs and to control horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in water. The review also provides discussion on the mechanism of degradation of ARGs and application of q-PCR and gel electrophoresis to obtain insights of the fate of ARGs during UV-based treatment processes. | 2019 | 32133212 |
| 7601 | 1 | 0.9999 | Evaluating the Impact of Cl(2)(•-) Generation on Antibiotic-Resistance Contamination Removal via UV/Peroxydisulfate. The removal of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs) using sulfate anion radical (SO(4)(•-))-based advanced oxidation processes has gained considerable attention recently. However, immense uncertainties persist in technology transfer. Particularly, the impact of dichlorine radical (Cl(2)(•-)) generation during SO(4)(•-)-mediated disinfection on ARB/ARGs removal remains unclear, despite the Cl(2)(•-) concentration reaching levels notably higher than those of SO(4)(•-) in certain SO(4)(•-)-based procedures applied to secondary effluents, hospital wastewaters, and marine waters. The experimental results of this study reveal a detrimental effect on the disinfection efficiency of tetracycline-resistant Escherichia coli (Tc-ARB) during SO(4)(•-)-mediated treatment owing to Cl(2)(•-) generation. Through a comparative investigation of the distinct inactivation mechanisms of Tc-ARB in the Cl(2)(•-)- and SO(4)(•-)-mediated disinfection processes, encompassing various perspectives, we confirm that Cl(2)(•-) is less effective in inducing cellular structural damage, perturbing cellular metabolic activity, disrupting antioxidant enzyme system, damaging genetic material, and inducing the viable but nonculturable state. Consequently, this diminishes the disinfection efficiency of SO(4)(•-)-mediated treatment owing to Cl(2)(•-) generation. Importantly, the results indicate that Cl(2)(•-) generation increases the potential risk associated with the dark reactivation of Tc-ARB and the vertical gene transfer process of tetracycline-resistant genes following SO(4)(•-)-mediated disinfection. This study underscores the undesired role of Cl(2)(•-) for ARB/ARGs removal during the SO(4)(•-)-mediated disinfection process. | 2024 | 38477971 |
| 7604 | 2 | 0.9998 | Combined applications of UV and chlorine on antibiotic resistance control: A critical review. Environmental health problems caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic-resistant genes (ARGs) have become a global concern. ARB and ARGs have been continuously detected in various water environments, which pose a new challenge for water quality safety assurance. Disinfection is a key water treatment process to eliminate pathogenic microorganisms in water, and combined chlorine and UV processes (the UV/Cl(2) process, the UV-Cl(2) process, and the Cl(2)-UV process) are considered potential disinfection methods to control antibiotic resistance. This review documented the efficacy and mechanism of combined UV and chlorine processes for the control of antibiotic resistance, as well as the effects of chlorine dose, solution pH, UV wavelength, and water matrix on the effectiveness of the processes. There are knowledge gaps in research on the combined chlorine and UV processes for antibiotic resistance control, in particular the UV-Cl(2) process and the Cl(2)-UV process. In addition, changes in the structure of microbial communities and the distribution of ARGs, which are closely related to the spread of antibiotic resistance in the water, induced by combined processes were also addressed. Whether these changes could lead to the re-transmission of antibiotic resistance and harm human health may need to be further evaluated. | 2024 | 38072103 |
| 7599 | 3 | 0.9998 | Antibiotic resistant bacteria survived from UV disinfection: Safety concerns on genes dissemination. Antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are the emerging contaminants leading to a serious worldwide health problem. Although disinfection like ultraviolet (UV) irradiation could remove part of ARB and ARGs, there still are residual ARB and ARGs in the effluent of wastewater treatment plants. Conjugative transfer is main concern of the risk of ARGs and little is known about the effects of UV disinfection on the transfer ability of the non-inactivated ARB in the effluent which will enter the environment. Hence the influences of UV irradiation and reactivation on ARB conjugative transfer ability were studied under laboratory condition, focusing on the survival bacteria from UV irradiation and the reactivated bacteria, as well as their descendants. The experimental results imply that even 1 mJ/cm(2) UV disinfection can significantly decrease the conjugative transfer frequency of the survival bacteria. However, viable but not culturable state cells induced by UV can reactivate through both photoreactivation and dark repair and retain the same level of transfer ability as the untreated strains. This finding is essential for re-considering about the post safety of UV irradiated effluent and microbial safety control strategies were required. | 2019 | 30851534 |
| 8512 | 4 | 0.9998 | Dissolved oxygen facilitates efficiency of chlorine disinfection for antibiotic resistance. Controlling the dissemination of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) is a global concern. While commonly used chlorine disinfectants can damage or even kill ARB, dissolved oxygen (DO) may affect the formation of reactive chlorine species. This leads to the hypothesis that DO may play roles in mediating the effectiveness of chlorine disinfection for antibiotic resistance. To this end, this study investigated the impacts of DO on the efficiency of chlorine disinfection for antibiotic resistance. The results revealed that DO could increase the inactivation efficiency of ARB under chloramine and free chlorine exposure at practically relevant concentrations. Reactive species induced by DO, including H(2)O(2), O(2)(-), and OH, inactivated ARB strains by triggering oxidative stress response and cell membrane damage. In addition, the removal efficiency of extracellular ARGs (i.e. tetA and bla(TEM)) was enhanced with increasing dosage of free chlorine or chloramine under aerobic conditions. DO facilitated the fragmentation of plasmids, contributing to the degradation of extracellular ARGs under exposure to chlorine disinfectants. The findings suggested that DO facilitates disinfection efficiency for antibiotic resistance in water treatment systems. | 2024 | 38750753 |
| 6499 | 5 | 0.9998 | From Conventional Disinfection to Antibiotic Resistance Control-Status of the Use of Chlorine and UV Irradiation during Wastewater Treatment. Extensive use of antibiotics for humans and livestock has led to an enhanced level of antibiotic resistance in the environment. Municipal wastewater treatment plants are regarded as one of the main sources of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in the aquatic environment. A significant amount of research has been carried out to understand the microbiological quality of wastewater with respect to its antibiotic resistance potential over the past several years. UV disinfection has primarily been used to achieve disinfection, including damaging DNA, but there has been an increasing use of chlorine and H(2)O(2)-based AOPs for targeting genes, including ARGs, considering the higher energy demands related to the greater UV fluences needed to achieve efficient DNA damage. This review focuses on some of the most investigated processes, including UV photolysis and chlorine in both individual and combined approaches and UV advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) using H(2)O(2). Since these approaches have practical disinfection and wastewater treatment applications globally, the processes are reviewed from the perspective of extending their scope to DNA damage/ARG inactivation in full-scale wastewater treatment. The fate of ARGs during existing wastewater treatment processes and how it changes with existing treatment processes is reviewed with a view to highlighting the research needs in relation to selected processes for addressing future disinfection challenges. | 2022 | 35162659 |
| 7607 | 6 | 0.9998 | Inactivation of Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria and Resistance Genes by Ozone: From Laboratory Experiments to Full-Scale Wastewater Treatment. Ozone, a strong oxidant and disinfectant, seems ideal to cope with future challenges of water treatment, such as micropollutants, multiresistant bacteria (MRB) and even intracellular antibiotic resistance genes (ARG), but information on the latter is scarce. In ozonation experiments we simultaneously determined kinetics and dose-dependent inactivation of Escherichia coli and its plasmid-encoded sulfonamide resistance gene sul1 in different water matrixes. Effects in E. coli were compared to an autochthonous wastewater community. Furthermore, resistance elimination by ozonation and post-treatment were studied in full-scale at a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP). Bacterial inactivation (cultivability, membrane damage) and degradation of sul1 were investigated using plate counts, flow cytometry and quantitative real-time PCR. In experiments with E. coli and the more ozone tolerant wastewater community disruption of intracellular genes was observed at specific ozone doses feasible for full-scale application, but flocs seemed to interfere with this effect. At the WWTP, regrowth during postozonation treatment partly compensated inactivation of MRB, and intracellular sul1 seemed unaffected by ozonation. Our findings indicate that ozone doses relevant for micropollutant abatement from wastewater do not eliminate intracellular ARG. | 2016 | 27775322 |
| 8503 | 7 | 0.9998 | Dual-pathway inhibition of antibiotic resistance genes by ferrate (Fe(VI)): Oxidative inactivation and genetic mobility impairment in anaerobically digested sludge. Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) are emerging environmental contaminants that threaten public health, highlighting the urgent need for effective control strategies. Ferrate (Fe(VI)), a strong and eco-friendly oxidant, shows great potential for this purpose. This study systematically evaluated the efficacy of Fe(VI) in mitigating ARGs and ARB in anaerobically digested sludge, with a particular focus on elucidating the underlying mechanisms by which Fe(VI) effects ARGs dissemination through both vertical gene transfer (VGT) and horizontal gene transfer (HGT). Result shows that Fe(VI) doses of 20 and 60 mg/g-TS reduce ARGs by 9.75 % and 19.12 %, respectively, while inactivating up to 24.7 % of ARB at the higher dose. Pathogenic ARB, such as Escherichia coli and Shigella sonnei, are preferentially removed, with abundances decrease by 63.7 % and 28.0 %. Mechanistically, the structural disruption of bacterial cells caused by Fe(VI) in anaerobically digested sludge, as indicated by a 29 % reduction in extracellular polymeric substances and a 23.7 % increase in cell membrane permeability. Subsequently, a marked release of intracellular ARGs into the extracellular environment is also observed, where they are likely subjected to degradation by Fe(VI). This oxidative killing accounts for the observed ARB decrease, thereby limiting the VGT of ARGs. In addition, Fe(VI) impairs the HGT of ARGs by diminishing their mobility potential, reflected in the reduced co-occurence with mobile genetic elements. Meanwhile, sludge bacterial competence for DNA uptake and recombination is markedly reduced, as evidenced by a 9.8 % decline in the abundance of related functional genes. These findings demonstrate that Fe(VI) effectively inhibits the dissemination of ARGs by targeting both primary transmission pathways. It suppresses VGT, thereby reducing the inheritance of ARB within populations, and limits HGT, curbing the spread of mobile ARGs among competent species. By disrupting these two critical routes, Fe(VI) shows strong potential as an effective strategy for mitigating ARGs propagation in sludge systems. | 2025 | 41138327 |
| 6498 | 8 | 0.9997 | Does light-based tertiary treatment prevent the spread of antibiotic resistance genes? Performance, regrowth and future direction. The common occurrence of antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs) originating from pathogenic and facultative pathogenic bacteria pose a high risk to aquatic environments. Low removal of ARGs in conventional wastewater treatment processes and horizontal dissemination of resistance genes between environmental bacteria and human pathogens have made antibiotic resistance evolution a complex global health issue. The phenomenon of regrowth of bacteria after disinfection raised some concerns regarding the long-lasting safety of treated waters. Despite the inactivation of living antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB), the possibility of transferring intact and liberated DNA containing ARGs remains. A step in this direction would be to apply new types of disinfection methods addressing this issue in detail, such as light-based advanced oxidation, that potentially enhance the effect of direct light interaction with DNA. This study is devoted to comprehensively and critically review the current state-of-art for light-driven disinfection. The main focus of the article is to provide an insight into the different photochemical disinfection methods currently being studied worldwide with respect to ARGs removal as an alternative to conventional methods. The systematic comparison of UV/chlorination, UV/H(2)O(2), sulfate radical based-AOPs, photocatalytic processes and photoFenton considering their mode of action on molecular level, operational parameters of the processes, and overall efficiency of removal of ARGs is presented. An in-depth discussion of different light-dependent inactivation pathways, influence of DBP and DOM on ARG removal and the potential bacterial regrowth after treatment is presented. Based on presented revision the risk of ARG transfer from reactivated bacteria has been evaluated, leading to a future direction for research addressing the challenges of light-based disinfection technologies. | 2022 | 35031375 |
| 7838 | 9 | 0.9997 | Impacts on antibiotic-resistant bacteria and their horizontal gene transfer by graphene-based TiO(2)&Ag composite photocatalysts under solar irradiation. In recent years, photocatalysis has been considered as a promising method, which provides measures to environmental pollution. Antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and their antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), as the emerging environmental pollutants, are released into the environment, resulting in antibiotic resistance spread. TiO(2)-based nanocomposites, as the most common photocatalytic material, may influence ARB and ARGs under photocatalytic conditions. However, the research on this aspect is rare. A novel nanocomposite synthesized from Ag, TiO(2) and graphene oxide (GO), was selected as a representative of nanomaterials for investigation. The experimental results indicated that TiO(2)/Ag/GO nanocomposites significantly affected ARB vitality. 100 mg/L TiO(2)/Ag/GO will reduce bacterial survival to 12.2% in 10 min under simulated sunlight irradiation. Chloramphenicol as the most representative antibiotic in the water, reduces the effect of ARB inactivation under photocatalytic conditions. The addition of TiO(2)/Ag/GO could affect tetracycline antibiotic resistance. The level of bacterial tolerance to tetracycline had a significant reduction. The horizontal gene transfer was promoted from 1 to 2 folds with the addition of TiO(2)/Ag/GO. Even high TiO(2)/Ag/GO concentration (100 mg/L) sample had a limited promotion, suggesting that TiO(2)/Ag/GO will not increase the risk of antibiotic resistance spread compared to other nano materials. | 2019 | 31330386 |
| 8547 | 10 | 0.9997 | Molecular level removal of antibiotic resistant bacteria and genes: A review of interfacial chemical in advanced oxidation processes. As a kind of novel and persistent environmental pollutants, antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) have been frequently detected in different aquatic environment, posing potential risks to public health and ecosystems, resulting in a biosecurity issue that cannot be ignored. Therefore, in order to control the spread of antibiotic resistance in the environment, advanced oxidation technology (such as Fenton-like, photocatalysis, electrocatalysis) has become an effective weapon for inactivating and eliminating ARB and ARGs. However, in the process of advanced oxidation technology, studying and regulating catalytic active sites at the molecular level and studying the adsorption and surface oxidation reactions between catalysts and ARGs can achieve in-depth exploration of the mechanism of ARGs removal. This review systematically reveals the catalytic sites and related mechanisms of catalytic antagonistic genes in different advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) systems. We also summarize the removal mechanism of ARGs and how to reduce the spread of ARGs in the environment through combining a variety of characterization methods. Importantly, the potential of various catalysts for removing ARGs in practical applications has also been recognized, providing a promising approach for the deep purification of wastewater treatment plants. | 2024 | 38447374 |
| 6500 | 11 | 0.9997 | Effect of ozonation-based disinfection methods on the removal of antibiotic resistant bacteria and resistance genes (ARB/ARGs) in water and wastewater treatment: a systematic review. Antibiotic resistance is considered a universal health threat of the 21st century which its distribution and even development are mainly mediated by water-based media. Disinfection processes with the conventional methods are still the most promising options to combat such crises in aqueous matrices especially wastewater. Knowing that the extent of effectiveness and quality of disinfection is of great importance, this paper aimed to systematically review and discuss ozonation (as one of the main disinfectants with large scale application) effect on removing antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) from aqueous solutions, for which no study has been reported. For this, a comprehensive literature survey was performed within the international databases using appropriate keywords which yielded several studies involving different aspects and the effectiveness extent of ozonation on ARB & ARGs. The results showed that no definite conclusion could be drawn about the superiority of ozone alone or in a hybrid form. Mechanism of action was carefully evaluated and discussed although it is still poorly understood. Evaluation of the studies from denaturation and repairment perspectives showed that regrowth cannot be avoided after ozonation, especially for some ARB & ARGs variants. In addition, the comparison of the effectiveness on ARB & ARGs showed that ozonation is more effective for resistant bacteria than their respective genes. The degradation efficiency was found to be mainly influenced by operational parameters of CT (i.e. ozone dose & contact time), solids, alkalinity, pH, and type of pathogens and genes. Moreover, the correlation between ARB & ARGs removal and stressors (such as antibiotic residuals, heavy metals, aromatic matters, microcystins, opportunistic pathogens, etc.) has been reviewed to give the optimal references for further in-depth studies. The future perspectives have also been reported. | 2022 | 34767893 |
| 7581 | 12 | 0.9997 | Enhanced performance of anaerobic digestion of cephalosporin C fermentation residues by gamma irradiation-induced pretreatment. Antibiotic fermentation residues is a hazardous waste due to the existence of residual antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), probably leading to the induction and spread of antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) in the environment, which could pose potential harm to the ecosystem and human health. It is urgent to develop an effective technology to remove the residual antibiotics and ARGs. In this study, the anaerobic digestion combined with gamma irradiation was applied for the disposal and utilization of cephalosporin C fermentation residues. The experimental results showed that the antibacterial activities of cephalosporin C against Staphylococcus aureus were significantly decreased after anaerobic digestion. The removal of tolC, a multidrug resistant gene, was improved up to 100% by the combination of gamma irradiation and anaerobic digestion compared to solely anaerobic digestion process, which may be due to the changes of microbial community structures induced by gamma irradiation. | 2020 | 31590081 |
| 6764 | 13 | 0.9997 | Chlorine disinfection promotes the exchange of antibiotic resistance genes across bacterial genera by natural transformation. Chlorine disinfection to drinking water plays an important role in preventing and controlling waterborne disease outbreaks globally. Nevertheless, little is known about why it enriches the antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in bacteria after chlorination. Here, ARGs released from killed antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB), and culturable chlorine-injured bacteria produced in the chlorination process as the recipient, were investigated to determine their contribution to the horizontal transfer of ARGs during disinfection treatment. We discovered Escherichia coli, Salmonella aberdeen, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Enterococcus faecalis showed diverse resistance to sodium hypochlorite, and transferable RP4 could be released from killed sensitive donor consistently. Meanwhile, the survival of chlorine-tolerant injured bacteria with enhanced cell membrane permeabilisation and a strong oxidative stress-response demonstrated that a physiologically competent cell could be transferred by RP4 with an improved transformation frequency of up to 550 times compared with the corresponding untreated bacteria. Furthermore, the water quality factors involving chemical oxygen demand (COD(Mn)), ammonium nitrogen and metal ions (Ca(2+) and K(+)) could significantly promote above transformation frequency of released RP4 into injured E. faecalis. Our findings demonstrated that the chlorination process promoted the horizontal transfer of plasmids by natural transformation, which resulted in the exchange of ARGs across bacterial genera and the emergence of new ARB, as well as the transfer of chlorine-injured opportunistic pathogen from non-ARB to ARB. Considering that the transfer elements were quite resistant to degradation through disinfection, this situation poses a potential risk to public health. | 2020 | 32327733 |
| 8516 | 14 | 0.9997 | Graphene Oxide Inhibits Antibiotic Uptake and Antibiotic Resistance Gene Propagation. Antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in the natural environment have become substantial threats to the ecosystem and public health. Effective strategies to control antibiotics and ARG contaminations are emergent. A novel carbon nanomaterial, graphene oxide (GO), has attracted a substantial amount of attention in environmental fields. This study discovered the inhibition effects of GO on sulfamethoxazole (SMZ) uptake for bacteria and ARG transfer among microorganisms. GO promoted the penetration of SMZ from intracellular to extracellular environments by increasing the cell membrane permeability. In addition, the formation of a GO-SMZ complex reduced the uptake of SMZ in bacteria. Moreover, GO decreased the abundance of the sulI and intI genes by approximately 2-3 orders of magnitude, but the global bacterial activity was not obviously inhibited. A class I integron transfer experiment showed that the transfer frequency was up to 55-fold higher in the control than that of the GO-treated groups. Genetic methylation levels were not significant while sulI gene replication was inhibited. The biological properties of ARGs were altered due to the GO-ARG noncovalent combination, which was confirmed using multiple spectral analyses. This work suggests that GO can potentially be applied for controlling ARG contamination via inhibiting antibiotic uptake and ARG propagation. | 2016 | 27934199 |
| 7602 | 15 | 0.9997 | A review of the influence of treatment strategies on antibiotic resistant bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes. Antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARG) in the aquatic environment have become an emerging contaminant issue, which has implications for human and ecological health. This review begins with an introduction to the occurrence of ARB and ARG in different environmental systems such as natural environments and drinking water resources. For example, ARG or ARB with resistance to ciprofloxacin, sulfamethoxazole, trimethoprim, quinolone, vancomycin, or tetracycline (e.g., tet(A), tet(B), tet(C), tet(G), tet(O), tet(M), tet(W), sul I, and sul II) have been detected in the environment. The development of resistance may be intrinsic, may be acquired through spontaneous mutations (de novo), or may occur due to horizontal gene transfer from donor bacteria, phages, or free DNA to recipient bacteria. An overview is also provided of the current knowledge regarding inactivation of ARB and ARG, and the mechanism of the effects of different disinfection processes in water and wastewater (chlorination, UV irradiation, Fenton reaction, ozonation, and photocatalytic oxidation). The effects of constructed wetlands and nanotechnology on ARB and ARG are also summarized. | 2016 | 26775188 |
| 6493 | 16 | 0.9997 | Antibiotic microbial resistance (AMR) removal efficiencies by conventional and advanced wastewater treatment processes: A review. The World Health Organization (WHO) has identified the spread of antibiotic resistance as one of the major risks to global public health. An important transfer route into the aquatic environment is the urban water cycle. In this paper the occurrence and transport of antibiotic microbial resistance in the urban water cycle are critically reviewed. The presence of antibiotic resistance in low impacted surface water is being discussed to determine background antibiotic resistance levels, which might serve as a reference for treatment targets in the absence of health-based threshold levels. Different biological, physical and disinfection/oxidation processes employed in wastewater treatment and their efficacy regarding their removal of antibiotic resistant bacteria and antibiotic resistance geness (ARGs) were evaluated. A more efficient removal of antibiotic microbial resistance abundances from wastewater effluents can be achieved by advanced treatment processes, including membrane filtration, ozonation, UV-irradiation or chlorination, to levels typically observed in urban surface water or low impacted surface water. | 2019 | 31195321 |
| 7609 | 17 | 0.9997 | Effect of Powdered Activated Carbon as Advanced Step in Wastewater Treatments on Antibiotic Resistant Microorganisms. BACKGROUND: Conventional wastewater treatment plants discharge significant amounts of antibiotic resistant bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes into natural water bodies contributing to the spread of antibiotic resistance. Some advanced wastewater treatment technologies have been shown to effectively decrease the number of bacteria. Nevertheless, there is still a lack of knowledge about the effectiveness of these treatments on antibiotic resistant bacteria and antibiotic resistant genes. To the best of our knowledge, no specific studies have considered how powdered activated carbon (PAC) treatments can act on antibiotic resistant bacteria, although it is essential to assess the impact of this wastewater treatment on the spread of antibiotic resistant bacteria. METHODS: To address this gap, we evaluated the fate and the distribution of fluorescent-tagged antibiotic/ antimycotic resistant microorganisms in a laboratory-scale model simulating a process configuration involving powdered activated carbon as advanced wastewater treatment. Furthermore, we studied the possible increase of naturally existing antibiotic resistant bacteria during the treatment implementing PAC recycling. RESULTS: The analysis of fluorescent-tagged microorganisms demonstrated the efficacy of the PAC adsorption treatment in reducing the load of both susceptible and resistant fluorescent microorganisms in the treated water, reaching a removal efficiency of 99.70%. Moreover, PAC recycling did not increase the resistance characteristics of cultivable bacteria neither in the sludge nor in the treated effluent. CONCLUSION: Results suggest that wastewater PAC treatment is a promising technology not only for the removal of micropollutants but also for its effect in decreasing antibiotic resistant bacteria release. | 2019 | 30727884 |
| 8548 | 18 | 0.9997 | Persulfate salts to combat bacterial resistance in the environment through antibiotic degradation and biofilm disruption. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic-resistant genes (ARGs) have become a critical topic among researchers because of the excessive use of antibiotics in human and animal health care. Globally, it poses a serious threat to human health and the environment. Antibiotics are often poorly metabolized, with 30-90 % excreted into the environment, contaminating aquatic and ground ecosystems, and fostering resistance. Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), particularly sulfate radical-based AOPs (SR-AOPs), offer promising solutions for degrading antibiotics and resistant biofilms. Persulfate (PS) and Peroxymonosulfate (PMS) are key oxidants in these processes, generating sulfate and hydroxyl radicals when activated by heat, UV light, or transition metals. PS with a redox potential of E°=2.01 V is an affordable and effective oxidant. However, PS requires activation for the degradation of contaminants. PMS is stable across a broad pH range and produces both sulfate and hydroxyl radicals, allowing it to function independently without activation. Thus, PMS serving as a versatile agent for environmental treatment. This review broadly describes the degradation mechanisms of different classes of antibiotics and biofilms. Despite these promising developments, SR-AOPs still face challenges in managing complex wastewater systems, which often contain multiple pollutants. Moreover, gaps remain in understanding of the toxicity of reaction intermediates and in optimizing the large-scale application of these processes. Future research should focus on the in-situ generation of sulfate radicals, combining different activation methods to enhance degradation efficiency, and developing sustainable and cost-effective approaches for large-scale wastewater treatment. | 2025 | 40532556 |
| 8550 | 19 | 0.9997 | Advances and solutions in biological treatment for antibiotic wastewater with resistance genes: A review. Biological treatment represents a fundamental component of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). The transmission of antibiotic resistance bacteria (ARB) and resistance genes (ARGs) occurred through the continuous migration and transformation, attributed to the residual presence of antibiotics in WWTPs effluent, posing a significant threat to the entire ecosystem. It is necessary to propose novel biological strategies to address the challenge of refractory contaminants, such as antibiotics, ARGs and ARB. This review summarizes the occurrence of antibiotics in wastewater, categorized by high and low concentrations. Additionally, current biological treatments used in WWTPs, such as aerobic activated sludge, anaerobic digestion, sequencing batch reactor (SBR), constructed wetland, membrane-related bioreactors and biological aerated filter (BAF) are introduced. In particular, because microorganisms are the key to those biological treatments, the effect of high and low concentration of antibiotics on microorganisms are thoroughly discussed. Finally, solutions involving functional bacteria, partial nitrification (PN)-Anammox and lysozyme embedding are suggested from the perspective of the entire biological treatment process. Overall, this review provides valuable insights for the simultaneous removal of antibiotics and ARGs in antibiotics wastewater. | 2024 | 39121628 |