Mechanism and potential risk of antibiotic resistant bacteria carrying last resort antibiotic resistance genes under electrochemical treatment. - Related Documents




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784501.0000Mechanism and potential risk of antibiotic resistant bacteria carrying last resort antibiotic resistance genes under electrochemical treatment. The significant rise in the number of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) that resulted from our abuse of antibiotics could do severe harm to public health as well as to the environment. We investigated removal efficiency and removal mechanism of electrochemical (EC) treatment based on 6 different bacteria isolated from hospital wastewater carrying 3 last resort ARGs including NDM-1, mcr-1 and tetX respectively. We found that the removal efficiency of ARGs increased with the increase of both voltage and electrolysis time while the maximum removal efficiency can reach 90%. The optimal treatment voltage and treatment time were 3 V and 120 min, respectively. Temperature, pH and other factors had little influence on the EC treatment process. The mechanism of EC treatment was explored from the macroscopic and microscopic levels by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and flow cytometry. Our results showed that EC treatment significantly changed the permeability of cell membrane and caused cells successively experience early cell apoptosis, late cell apoptosis and cell necrosis. Moreover, compared with traditional disinfection methods, EC treatment had less potential risks. The conjugative transfer frequencies of cells were significantly reduced after treatment. Less than 1% of bacteria entered the viable but nonculturable (VBNC) state and less than 5% of intracellular ARGs (iARGs) turned into extracellular ARGs (eARGs). Our findings provide new insights into as well as important reference for future electrochemical treatment in removing ARB from hospital wastewater.202235085630
784410.9999Insight into using a novel ultraviolet/peracetic acid combination disinfection process to simultaneously remove antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes in wastewater: Mechanism and comparison with conventional processes. In this study, the simultaneous removal mechanism of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) was investigated using the novel ultraviolet/peracetic acid (UV/PAA) combination disinfection process and conventional disinfection processes were also applied for comparison. The results showed that UV/PAA disinfection with a high UV dosage (UV/PAA-H) was most effective for the removal of tetracyclines, quinolones, macrolides and β-lactams; their average removal efficiencies ranged from 25.7% to 100%, while NaClO disinfection was effective for the removal of sulfonamides (∼81.6%). The majority of ARGs were well removed after the UV/PAA-H disinfection, while specific genes including tetB, tetC, ermA and bla(TEM) significantly increased after NaClO disinfection. In addition, β-lactam resistance genes (-35.9%) and macrolides resistance genes (-12.0%) remarkably augmented after UV/NaClO disinfection. The highly reactive oxidation species generated from UV/PAA process including hydroxyl radicals (•OH) and carbon-centered organic radicals (R-C•), were responsible for the elimination of antibiotics and ARGs. Correlation analysis showed that tetracycline, sulfonamide and macrolide antibiotics removal showed a positive correlation with the corresponding ARGs, and a low dose of antibiotic residues played an important role in the distribution of ARGs. Metagenomic sequencing analysis showed that UV/PAA disinfection could not only greatly decrease the abundance of resistant bacteria but also downregulate the expression of key functional genes involved in ARGs propagation and inhibit the signal transduction of the host bacteria, underlying that its removal mechanism was quite different from that of NaClO-based disinfection processes. Our study provides valuable information for understanding the simultaneous removal mechanism of antibiotics and ARGs in wastewater during the disinfection processes, especially for the novel UV/PAA combination process.202234982977
757120.9999Ancient Oriental Wisdom still Works: Removing ARGs in Drinking Water by Boiling as compared to Chlorination. Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in municipal drinking water may not be effectively removed during centralized treatment. To reduce potential health risks, water disinfection at the point-of-use scale is warranted. This study investigated the performance of boiling, a prevalent household water disinfection means, in response to ARGs contamination. We found that boiling was more efficient in inactivating both Escherichia coli and environmental bacteria compared to chlorination and pasteurization. Boiling of environmental bacteria suspension removed a much broader spectrum of ARGs and mobile genetic elements (up to 141 genes) than chlorination (up to 13 genes), such better performance was largely attributed to a stronger inactivation of chlorine-tolerant bacteria including Acinetobacter and Bacillus. Accumulation of extracellular ARGs was found during low-temperature heating (≤ 80°C) and in the initial stage of chlorination (first 3 min when initial chlorine was 5 mg/L and first 12 min when initial chlorine was 1 mg/L). These extracellular ARGs as well as the intracellular ARGs got removed as the heating temperature increased or the chlorination time prolonged. Under the same treatment time (30 min), high-temperature heating (≥ 90.1°C) damaged the DNA structure more thoroughly than chlorination (5 mg/L). Taking into account the low transferability of ARGs after DNA melting, boiling may provide an effective point-of-use approach to attenuating bacterial ARGs in drinking water and is still worth promoting in the future.202234910990
784330.9999Inactivation of chlorine-resistant bacteria (CRB) via various disinfection methods: Resistance mechanism and relation with carbon source metabolism. With the widespread use of chlorine disinfection, chlorine-resistant bacteria (CRB) in water treatment systems have gained public attention. Bacterial chlorine resistance has been found positively correlated with extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) secretion. In this study, we selected the most suitable CRB controlling method against eight bacterial strains with different chlorine resistance among chloramine, ozone, and ultraviolet (UV) disinfection, analyzed the resistance mechanisms, clarified the contribution of EPS to disinfection resistance, and explored the role of carbon source metabolism capacity. Among all the disinfectants, UV disinfection showed the highest disinfection capacity by achieving the highest average and median log inactivation rates for the tested strains. For Bacillus cereus CR19, the strain with the highest chlorine resistance, 40 mJ/cm(2) UV showed a 1.90 log inactivation, which was much higher than that of 2 mg-Cl(2)/L chlorine (0.67 log), 2 mg-Cl(2)/L chloramine (1.68 log), and 2 mg/L ozone (0.19 log). Meanwhile, the UV resistance of the bacteria did not correlate with EPS secretion. These characteristics render UV irradiation the best CRB controlling disinfection method. Chloramine was found to have a generally high inactivation efficiency for bacteria with high chlorine-resistance, but a low inactivation efficiency for low chlorine-resistant ones. Although EPS consumed up to 56.7% of chloramine which an intact bacterial cell consumed, EPS secretion could not explain chloramine resistance. Thus, chloramine is an acceptable CRB control method. Similar to chlorine, ozone generally selected high EPS-secreting bacteria, with EPS consuming up to 100% ozone. Therefore, ozone is not an appropriate method for controlling CRB with high EPS secretion. EPS played an important role in all types of disinfection resistance, and can be considered the main mechanism for bacterial chlorine and ozone disinfection resistance. However, as EPS was not the main resistance mechanism in UV and chloramine disinfection, CRB with high EPS secretion were inactivated more effectively. Furthermore, carbon source metabolism was found related to the multiple resistance of bacteria. Those with low carbon source metabolism capacity tended to have higher multiple resistance, especially to chlorine, ozone, and UV light. Distinctively, among the tested gram-negative bacteria, in contrast to other disinfectants, chloramine resistance was negatively correlated with EPS secretion and positively correlated with carbon source metabolism capacity, suggesting a special disinfection mechanism.202337659185
850140.9998Mechanistic insight of simultaneous removal of tetracycline and its related antibiotic resistance bacteria and genes by ferrate(VI). The emergence of antibiotics and their corresponding antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) have posed great challenges to the public health. The paper demonstrates the removal of co-existing tetracycline (TC), its resistant Escherichia coli (E. coli), and ARGs (tetA and tetR) in a mixed system by applying ferrate(VI) (Fe(VI)O(4)(2-), Fe(VI)) at pH 7.0. TC was efficiently degraded by Fe(VI), and the rapid inactivation of the resistant E. coli was found with the complete loss of culturability. The results of flow cytometry suggested that the damage of membrane integrity and respiratory activity were highly correlated with the Fe(VI) dosages. Moreover, high-dose Fe(VI) eliminates 6 log(10) viable but non-culturable (VBNC) cells and even breaks the cells into fragments. ARGs in extracellular form (e-ARGs) exhibited a high sensitivity of 4.44 log(10) removal to Fe(VI). Comparatively, no removal of intracellular ARGs (i-ARGs) was observed due to the multi-protection of cellular structure and rapid decay of Fe(VI). The oxidized products of TC were assessed to be less toxic than the parent compound. Overall, this study demonstrated the superior efficiency and great promise of Fe(VI) on simultaneous removal of antibiotics and their related ARB and ARGs in water.202133984704
758150.9998Enhanced 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.202031590081
784160.9998Simultaneous removal of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes in wastewater by a novel nonthermal plasma/peracetic acid combination system: Synergistic performance and mechanism. In this study, a novel and green method combining plasma with peracetic acid (plasma/PAA) was developed to simultaneously remove antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in wastewater, which achieves significant synergistic effects in the removal efficiencies and energy yield. At a plasma current of 2.6 A and PAA dosage of 10 mg/L, the removal efficiencies of most detected antibiotics in real wastewater exceeded 90 % in 2 min, with the ARG removal efficiencies ranging from 6.3 % to 75.2 %. The synergistic effects of plasma and PAA could be associated with the motivated production of reactive species (including •OH, •CH(3), (1)O(2), ONOO(-), •O(2)(-) and NO•), which decomposed antibiotics, killed host bacteria, and inhibited ARG conjugative transfer. In addition, plasma/PAA also changed the contributions and abundances of ARG host bacteria and downregulated the corresponding genes of two-component regulatory systems, thus reducing ARG propagation. Moreover, the weak correlations between the removal of antibiotics and ARGs highlights the commendable performance of plasma/PAA in the simultaneous removal of antibiotics and ARGs. Therefore, this study affords an innovative and effective avenue to remove antibiotics and ARGs, which relies on the synergistic mechanisms of plasma and PAA and the simultaneous removal mechanisms of antibiotics and ARGs in wastewater.202337027926
763070.9998Coexistence of silver ion and tetracycline at environmentally relevant concentrations greatly enhanced antibiotic resistance gene development in activated sludge bioreactor. Antibiotic resistance has become a global public health problem. Recently, various environmental pollutants have been reported to induce the proliferation of antibiotic resistance. However, the impact of multiple pollutants (e.g., heavy metals and antibiotics), which more frequently occur in practical environments, is poorly understood. Herein, one widely distributed heavy metal (Ag(+)) and one frequently detected antibiotic (tetracycline) were chosen to investigate their coexisting effect on the proliferation of antibiotic resistance in the activated sludge system. Results show that the co-occurrence of Ag(+) and tetracycline at environmentally relevant concentrations exhibited no distinct inhibition in reactor performances. However, they inhibited the respiratory activity by 42%, destroyed the membrane structure by 218%, and increased membrane permeability by 29% compared with the blank control bioreactor. Moreover, the relative abundances of target antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) (e.g., tetA, bla(TEM-1), and sulII) in effluent after exposure of coexisting Ag(+) and tetracycline were increased by 92-1983% compared with those in control reactor, which were 1.1-4.3 folds higher than the sum of the sole ones. These were possibly attributed to the enrichments of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The results would illumine the coexisting effect of heavy metals and antibiotics on the dissemination of ARGs in activated sludge system.202234482077
784780.9998Inactivation and change of tetracycline-resistant Escherichia coli in secondary effluent by visible light-driven photocatalytic process using Ag/AgBr/g-C(3)N(4). Control of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and their related genes in secondary effluents has become a serious issue because of increased awareness of their health risks. A considerable number of techniques have been developed in recent years, particularly in relation to advanced oxidation. However, limited information is known about cellular behavior and resistance characteristic change during photocatalytic treatment. In this study, the inactivation of tetracycline (TC)-resistant Escherichia coli (TC-E. coli), removal of TC-resistant genes (TC-RGs), and antibiotic susceptibility were evaluated by employing photocatalytic treatment using Ag/AgBr/g-C(3)N(4) with visible light irradiation. The effects of light intensity, photocatalyst dosage, and reaction ambient temperature on photocatalysis were modelled and investigated. The rate of TC-E. coli removal was also optimized. Results demonstrated that the optimal conditions for TC-E. coli removal included light intensity of 96.0 mW/cm(2), photocatalyst dosage of 211.0 mg/L, and reaction ambient temperature of 23.7 °C. Under such conditions, the ARB removal rate was 6.1 log after 90 min and the related TC-RG removal rates were 49%, 86%, 69%, and 86% for tetA, tetM, tetQ, and intl1, respectively. The minimum inhibitory concentration test after photocatalysis shows that the antibiotic resistance of TC-E. coli was enhanced, which may be mainly due to the changes in the membrane potential and resulted in difficulty in destroying the bacteria through antibiotic contact. Hence, photocatalytic treatment could be an ideal method for ARB and antibiotic-resistant gene (ARG) control in wastewater, but the health risks of the remaining ARB and ARG should be investigated further.202031841919
719390.9998Plasmid-mediated transfer of antibiotic resistance genes and biofilm formation in a simulated drinking water distribution system under chlorine pressure. The effects of disinfectants and plasmid-based antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) on the growth of microorganisms and the plasmid-mediated transfer of ARGs in the water and biofilm of the drinking water distribution system under simulated conditions were explored. The heterotrophic plate count of the water in reactors with 0.1 mg/L NaClO and NH(2)Cl was higher than in the control groups. There was no similar phenomenon in biofilm. In the water of reactors containing NaClO, the aphA and bla genes were lower than in the antibiotic resistant bacteria group, while both genes were higher in the water of reactors with NH(2)Cl than in the control group. Chloramine may promote the transfer of ARGs in the water phase. Both genes in the biofilm of the reactors containing chlorine were lower than the control group. Correlation analysis between ARGs and water quality parameters revealed that the copy numbers of the aphA gene were significantly positively correlated with the copy numbers of the bla gene in water and significantly negatively correlated in biofilm (p < 0.05). The results of the sequencing assay showed that bacteria in the biofilm, in the presence of disinfectant, were primarily Gram-negative. 1.0 mg/L chlorine decreased the diversity of the community in the biofilm. The relative abundance of some bacteria that may undergo transfer increased in the biofilm of the reactor containing 0.1 mg/L chlorine.202539617560
7629100.9998Graphene oxide in the water environment could affect tetracycline-antibiotic resistance. In recent years, the influence of new materials like nanoparticles in the water environment on biological substances has been widely studied. Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) represent a new type of pollutant in the environment. Graphene oxide (GO), as a nano material, because of its unique structure, may have an impact on antibiotic resistance bacteria (ARB) and ARGs; however the research in this area is rarely reported. Therefore, this study mainly investigated the effects of GO on bacterial antibiotic resistance. The results showed that GO had a limited effect on ARB inactivation. A high concentration of GO (>10 mg/L) can damage resistant plasmids to reduce bacterial resistance to antibiotics, but low concentrations of GO (<1 mg/L) led to almost no damage to the plasmid. However, all tested concentrations of GO promoted the conjugative transfer from 1to over 3 folds, with low concentrations and high concentration (1-10 and 100 mg/L) of GO samples the least promoted. The overall effect of GO on antibiotic resistance needs further investigation.201728549325
7601110.9998Evaluating 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.202438477971
7605120.9998Inactivation of antibiotic resistant bacteria and their resistance genes in sewage by applying pulsed electric fields. We evaluated the suitability of pulsed electric field (PEF) technology as a new disinfection option in the sewage treatment plants (STPs) that can inactivate antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). It was shown that PEF applied disinfection could inactivate not only vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), but also vanA resistance gene. Cultivable VRE could be effectively inactivated by PEF applied disinfection, and were reduced to below the detection limit (log reduction value of VRE > 5 log). Although the vanA also showed a reduction of more than 4 log, it remained in the order of 10(5) copies/mL, suggesting that ARGs are more difficult to be inactivated than ARB in PEF applied disinfection. Among parameters in each applying condition verified in this study, the initial voltage was found to be the most important for inactivation of ARB and ARGs. Furthermore, frequency was a parameter that affects the increase or decrease of the duration time, and it was suggested that the treatment time could be shortened by increasing the frequency. Our results strongly suggested that PEF applied disinfection may be a new disinfection technology option for STPs that contributes to the control of ARB and ARGs contamination in the aquatic environments.202234879573
6760130.9998Mechanism of antibiotic resistance spread during sub-lethal ozonation of antibiotic-resistant bacteria with different resistance targets. The increase and spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) in aquatic environments and the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) greatly impact environmental and human health. It is necessary to understand the mechanism of action of ARB and ARGs to formulate measures to solve this problem. This study aimed to determine the mechanism of antibiotic resistance spread during sub-lethal ozonation of ARB with different antibiotic resistance targets, including proteins, cell walls, and cell membranes. ARB conjugation and transformation frequencies increased after exposure to 0-1.0 mg/L ozone for 10 min. During sub-lethal ozonation, compared with control groups not stimulated by ozone, the conjugative transfer frequencies of E. coli DH5α (CTX), E. coli DH5α (MCR), and E. coli DH5α (GEN) increased by 1.35-2.02, 1.13-1.58, and 1.32-2.12 times, respectively; the transformation frequencies of E. coli DH5α (MCR) and E. coli DH5α (GEN) increased by 1.49-3.02 and 1.45-1.92 times, respectively. When target inhibitors were added, the conjugative transfer frequencies of antibiotics targeting cell wall and membrane synthesis decreased 0.59-0.75 and 0.43-0.76 times, respectively, while that for those targeting protein synthesis increased by 1-1.38 times. After inhibitor addition, the transformation frequencies of bacteria resistant to antibiotics targeting the cell membrane and proteins decreased by 0.76-0.89 and 0.69-0.78 times, respectively. Cell morphology, cell membrane permeability, reactive oxygen species, and antioxidant enzymes changed with different ozone concentrations. Expression of most genes related to regulating different antibiotic resistance targets was up-regulated when bacteria were exposed to sub-lethal ozonation, further confirming the target genes playing a crucial role in the inactivation of different target bacteria. These results will help guide the careful utilization of ozonation for bacterial inactivation, providing more detailed reference information for ozonation oxidation treatment of ARB and ARGs in aquatic environments.202438810347
7572140.9998Stormwater runoff treatment through electrocoagulation: antibiotic resistant bacteria removal and its transmission risks. Recently, increasing attention has been paid to antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) in stormwater runoff. However, there were little data on ARB removal through electrocoagulation (EC) treatment. In this study, batch experiments were conducted to investigate key designs for ARB removal, role of SS, effects of water matrix, and potential risks after EC treatment under the pre-determined conditions. EC treatment with 5 mA/cm(2) of current density and 4 cm of inter-electrode distance was optimal with the highest ARB removal (3.04 log reduction for 30 min). The presence of SS significantly improved ARB removal during EC treatment, where ARB removal increased with the increase of SS levels when SS less than 300 mg/L. Large ARB removal was found under particles with size lower than 150 μm with low contribution (less than 10%) of the settlement without EC treatment, implying that the enhancement of ARB adsorption onto small particles could be one of the reasonable approaches for ARB removal through EC treatment. ARB removal increased firstly and then decreased with the increase of pH, while had proportional relationship with conductivity. After the optimal condition, there were weak conjugation transfer but high transformation frequency (5.5 × 10(-2) for bla(TEM)) for target antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), indicating that there could be still a risk of antibiotic resistance transformation after EC treatment. These suggested that the combination of EC and other technologies (like electrochemical disinfection) should be potential ways to control antibiotic resistance transmission through stormwater runoff.202436848218
8499150.9998Inhibited conjugative transfer of antibiotic resistance genes in antibiotic resistant bacteria by surface plasma. Antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and resistance genes (ARGs) are emerging environmental pollutants with strong pathogenicity. In this study, surface plasma was developed to inactivate the donor ARB with Escherichia coli (AR E. coli) as a model, eliminate ARGs, and inhibit conjugative transfer of ARGs in water, highlighting the influences of concomitant inorganic ions. Surface plasma oxidation significantly inactivated AR E. coli, eliminated ARGs, and inhibited conjugative transfer of ARGs, and the presence of NO(3)(-), Cu(2+), and Fe(2+) all promoted these processes, and SO(4)(2-) did not have distinct effect. Approximately 4.5log AR E. coli was inactivated within 10 min treatment, and it increased to 7.4log AR E. coli after adding Fe(2+). Integrons intI1 decreased by 3.10log (without Fe(2+)) and 4.43log (adding Fe(2+)); the addition of Fe(2+) in the surface plasma induced 99.8% decline in the conjugative transfer frequency. The inhibition effects on the conjugative transfer of ARGs were mainly attributed to the reduced reactive oxygen species levels, decreased DNA damage-induced response, decreased intercellular contact, and down-regulated expression of plasmid transfer genes. This study disclosed underlying mechanisms for inhibiting ARGs transfer, and supplied a prospective technique for ARGs control.202134536683
7583160.9998Insights into the combined effect of ofloxacin and humic substances on sewage sludge anaerobic digestion. Humic substances (HS) and antibiotics are present simultaneously in various environments. However, the influence path and consequences of HS on antibiotics behaviors in complex anaerobic microbial systems are rarely known, hindering the understanding and control of antibiotics risks. This study for the first time investigated the combined effects of ofloxacin (OFL) and HS in sewage sludge anaerobic digestion system. Experimental results showed that OFL alone reduced the cumulative methane production and the maximum methane production rate by 14.6 % and 33.5 %, respectively. The methane production curves showed step by step adaption, which might be related with the increase of antibiotics resistance genes and their potential hosts. The coexistence of low concentration (6 % of sludge volatile solid) HS could alleviate the inhibition of OFL on hydrolysis-related bacteria and genes to a certain extent, thereby enhanced the methane production by 4.8 %. However, the coexistence of high concentration (12-24 % of sludge volatile solid) HS intensified the inhibition on hydrolysis-related bacteria and genes, and had more potential to combine with organic matters to prevent sludge solubilization, macromolecular organics hydrolysis and OFL degradation, thereby further decreasing the methane production by 7.6-15.9 %. Besides, the coexistence of OFL and high concentration HS increased the antimicrobial resistance and pathogenicity risks of digested sludge, by enhancing the residual level of verified pathogens, antibiotics resistance genes and virulence factor genes. This study provides new insights into the environmental risks of combined antibiotics and HS pollution, and offers a basis for strengthening the safe treatment and disposal of sewage sludge.202540752562
6751170.9998Assessment of chlorine and hydrogen peroxide on airborne bacteria: Disinfection efficiency and induction of antibiotic resistance. Airborne pathogens severely threaten public health worldwide. Air disinfection is essential to ensure public health. However, excessive use of disinfectants may endanger environmental and ecological security due to the residual disinfectants and their by-products. This study systematically evaluated disinfection efficiency, induction of multidrug resistance, and the underlying mechanisms of disinfectants (NaClO and H(2)O(2)) on airborne bacteria. The results showed that airborne bacteria were effectively inactivated by atomized NaClO (>160 μg/L) and H(2)O(2) (>320 μg/L) after 15 min. However, some bacteria still survived after disinfection by atomized NaClO (0-80 μg/L) and H(2)O(2) (0-160 μg/L), and they exhibited significant increases in antibiotic resistance. The whole-genome sequencing of the resistant bacteria revealed distinct mutations that were responsible for both antibiotic resistance and virulence. This study also provided evidences and insights into possible mechanisms underlying the induction of antibiotic resistance by air disinfection, which involved intracellular reactive oxygen species formation, oxidative stress responses, alterations in bacterial membranes, activation of efflux pumps, and the thickening of biofilms. The present results also shed light on the role of air disinfection in inducing antibiotic resistance, which could be a crucial factor contributing to the global spread of antibiotic resistance through the air.202438823102
7966180.9998How heavy metal stress promotes dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes in the activated sludge process. Heavy metals have been recently revealed as promoters to antibiotic resistance gene (ARG) dissemination in water environment, but their influence on ARG transfer in the activated sludge process has not been clear. In this study, a set of sequencing batch reactors (SBRs) and micro-scale microfluidic chips were established to quantify the impacts of heavy metals (0.5 mM of Pb, 0.1 mM of As, and 0.005 mM of Hg) on the ARG spreading in the activated sludge consortium. Under heavy metal stress, transfer frequencies were 1.7-3.6 folds increase compared to the control. Gram-negative bacteria increased significantly after heavy metal added, which were more prone to receiving resistant plasmid from donors. Meanwhile, the relative expression of genes related to conjugation changed in activated sludge, especially the expression of outer membrane protein and oxidative stress regulatory genes increased by 2.9-7.4 folds and 7.8-13.1 folds, respectively. Furthermore, using microfluidic chips, the dynamics of ARG transfer was observed at single cell level under heavy metal pressure. Heavy metals firstly promoted conjugation and then vertical gene transfer played an important part for ARG spreading. The results provided in-depth understanding of the influence of heavy metals on ARG behavior in the environment.202235724617
8500190.9998Plasma induced efficient removal of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli and antibiotic resistance genes, and inhibition of gene transfer by conjugation. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and their resistance genes (ARGs) are emerging environmental pollutants that pose great threats to human health. In this study, a novel strategy using plasma was developed to simultaneously remove antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli (AR bio-56954 E. coli) and its ARGs, aiming to inhibit gene transfer by conjugation. Approximately 6.6 log AR bio-56954 E. coli was inactivated within 10 min plasma treatment, and the antibiotic resistance to tested antibiotics (tetracycline, gentamicin, and amoxicillin) significantly decreased. Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) including •OH, (1)O(2), O(2)•(-), NO(2)(-), and NO(3)(-) contributed to ARB and ARGs elimination; their attacks led to destruction of cell membrane, accumulation of excessive intracellular reactive oxygen substances, deterioration of conformational structures of proteins, and destroy of nucleotide bases of DNA. As a result, the ARGs (tet(C), tet(W), blaTEM-1, aac(3)-II), and integron gene intI1), and conjugative transfer frequency of ARGs significantly decreased after plasma treatment. The results demonstrated that plasma has great prospective application in removing ARB and ARGs in water, inhibiting gene transfer by conjugation.202134214852