SOLDIER - Word Related Documents




#
Rank
Similarity
Title + Abs.
Year
PMID
012345
811100.9779Effect of alkaline-thermal pretreatment on biodegradable plastics degradation and dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes in co-compost system. Biodegradable plastics (BDPs) are an eco-friendly alternative to traditional plastics in organic waste, but their microbial degradation and impact on antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) transmission during co-composting remain poorly understood. This study examines how alkaline-thermal pretreatment enhances BDPs degradation and influences the fate of ARGs and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in co-composting. Pretreatment with 0.1 mol/L NaOH at 100℃ for 40 minutes increased the surface roughness and hydrophilicity of BDPs while reducing their molecular weight and thermal stability. Incorporating pretreated BDPs film (8 g/kg-TS) into the compost reduced the molecular weight of the BDPs by 59.70 % during the maturation stage, facilitating compost heating and prolonging the thermophilic stage. However, incomplete degradation of BDPs releases numerous smaller-sized microplastics, which can act as carriers for microorganisms, facilitating the dissemination of ARGs across environments and posing significant ecological and public health risks. Metagenomic analysis revealed that pretreatment enriched plastic-degrading bacteria, such as Thermobifida fusca, on BDPs surfaces and accelerated microbial plastic degradation during the thermophilic stage, but also increased ARGs abundance. Although pretreatment significantly reduced MGEs abundance (tnpA, IS19), the risk of ARGs dissemination remained. Three plastic-degrading bacteria (Pigmentiphaga sp002188465, Bacillus clausii, and Bacillus altitudinis) were identified as ARGs hosts, underscoring the need to address the risk of horizontal gene transfer of ARGs associated with pretreatment in organic waste management.202539970645
855810.9776Mitigating the vertical migration and leaching risks of antibiotic resistance genes through insect fertilizer application. The leaching and vertical migration risks of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) from fertilized soil to groundwater poses a significant threat to ecological and public safety. Insect fertilizer, particularly black soldier fly organic fertilizer (BOF), renowned for its minimal antibiotic resistance, emerge as a promising alternative for sustainable agricultural fertilization. This study employs soil-column leaching experiments to evaluate the impact of BOF on the leaching behavior of ARGs. Our results reveal that BOF significantly reduces the leaching risks of ARGs by 22.1 %-49.3 % compared to control organic fertilizer (COF). Moreover, BOF promotes the leaching of beneficial Bacillus and, according to random forest analysis, is the most important factor in predicting ARG profiles (3.02 % increase in the MSE). Further network analysis and mantel tests suggest that enhanced nitrogen metabolism in BOF leachates could foster Bacillus biofilm formation, thereby countering antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and mitigating antibiotic resistance. In addition, linear regression analysis revealed that Bacillus biofilm-associated genes pgaD (biofilm PGA synthesis protein), slrR (biofilm formation regulator), and kpsC (capsular polysaccharide export protein) were identified as pivotal in the elimination of ARGs, which can serve as effective indicators for assessing antibiotic resistance in groundwater. Collectively, this study demonstrates that BOF as an environmentally friendly fertilizer could markedly reduce the vertical migration risks of ARGs and proposes Bacillus biofilm formation related genes as reliable indicators for monitoring antibiotic resistance in groundwater.202540086570
811020.9776Removal of chlortetracycline and antibiotic resistance genes in soil by earthworms (epigeic Eisenia fetida and endogeic Metaphire guillelmi). The impacts of two ecological earthworms on the removal of chlortetracycline (CTC, 0.5 and 15 mg kg(-1)) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in soil were explored through the soil column experiments. The findings showed that earthworm could significantly accelerate the degradation of CTC and its metabolites (ECTC) in soil (P < 0.05), with epigeic Eisenia fetida promoting degradation rapidly and endogeic Metaphire guillelmi exhibiting a slightly better elimination effect. Earthworms alleviated the abundances of tetR, tetD, tetPB, tetG, tetA, sul1, TnpA, ttgB and intI1 in soil, with the total relative abundances of ARGs decreasing by 35.0-44.2% in earthworm treatments at the 28th day of cultivation. High throughput sequencing results displayed that the structure of soil bacteria community was modified apparently with earthworm added, and some possible CTC degraders, Aeromonas, Flavobacterium and Luteolibacter, were promoted by two kinds of earthworms. Redundancy analysis demonstrated that the reduction of CTC residues, Actinobacteria, Acidobacteria and Gemmatimonadetes owing to earthworm stimulation was responsible for the removal of ARGs and intI1 in soil. Additionally, intI1 declined obviously in earthworm treatments, which could weaken the risk of horizontal transmission of ARGs. Therefore, earthworm could restore the CTC-contaminated soil via enhancing the removal of CTC, its metabolites and ARGs.202133798888
812630.9776Antiallergic drugs drive the alteration of microbial community and antibiotic resistome in surface waters: A metagenomic perspective. Antiallergic drugs (AADs) are emerging contaminants of global concern due to their environmental persistence and potential ecological impacts. This study investigated the effects of seven AADs (chlorpheniramine, diphenhydramine, cetirizine, loratadine, desloratadine, sodium cromoglicate and calcium gluconate) at environmentally relevant concentrations on antibiotic resistome and bacterial community structures in water using microcosm experiments and metagenomic sequencing. The results showed that AADs increased the abundance of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) by 1.24- to 7.78-fold. Community structure shifts indicated that chlorpheniramine, diphenhydramine, and cetirizine promoted Actinobacteria (e.g., Aurantimicrobium), while the other four AADs favored Proteobacteria (e.g., Limnohabitans). AADs also significantly altered the relative abundance of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), with Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria identified as key ARB components and potential hosts of ARGs (e.g., evgS, mtrA, RanA). Host analysis showed ARGs were primarily carried by Actinobacteria (e.g., Aurantimicrobium) under chlorpheniramine, diphenhydramine, and cetirizine exposure, but by Proteobacteria (e.g., Limnohabitans) under the other four AADs. Furthermore, AADs facilitated the horizontal transfer of ARGs (e.g., evgS) within microbial communities, contributing to antibiotic resistance dissemination. This study highlights the ecological risks of AADs in promoting antibiotic resistance spread and provides new insights into their impact on microbial communities and resistome dynamics in aquatic environments.202540570627
694140.9768Tertiary Wastewater Treatment Processes Can Be a Double-Edged Sword for Water Quality Improvement in View of Mitigating Antimicrobial Resistance and Pathogenicity. Despite the high removal efficiency for chemical pollutants by tertiary wastewater treatment processes (TWTPs), there is no definite conclusion in terms of microbial risk mitigation yet. This study utilized metagenomic approaches to reveal the alterations of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), virulence factor genes (VFGs), their co-occurrence, and potential hosts during multiple TWTPs. Results showed that the TWTPs reduced chemical pollutants in wastewater, but the denitrifying biofilter (DB) significantly increased the absolute abundances of selected antibiotic-resistant bacteria and ARGs, and simultaneously elevated the relative abundances of ARGs and VFGs through the enrichment of multidrug resistance and offensive genes, respectively. Moreover, the co-occurrence of ARGs and VFGs (e.g., bacA-tapW, mexF-adeG) was only identified after the DB treatment and all carried by Pseudomonas. Then, the ultraviolet and constructed wetland treatment showed good complementarity for microbial risk reduction through mitigating antibiotic resistance and pathogenicity. Network and binning analyses showed that the shift of key operational taxonomic units affiliating to Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter may contribute to the dynamic changes of ARGs and VFGs during the TWTPs. Overall, this study sheds new light on how the TWTPs affect the antibiotic resistome and VFG profiles and what TWTPs should be selected for microbial risk mitigation.202336538014
810550.9767Refluxing mature compost to replace bulking agents: A low-cost solution for suppressing antibiotic resistance genes rebound in sewage sludge composting. Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) rebounding during composting cooling phase is a critical bottleneck in composting technology that increased ARGs dissemination and application risk of compost products. In this study, mature compost (MR) was used as a substitute for rice husk (RH) to mitigate the rebound of ARGs and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) during the cooling phase of sewage sludge composting, and the relationship among ARGs, MGEs, bacterial community and environmental factors was investigated to explore the key factor influencing ARGs rebound. The results showed that aadD, blaCTX-M02, ermF, ermB, tetX and vanHB significantly increased 4.76-32.41 times, and the MGEs rebounded by 38.60% in the cooling phase of RH composting. Conversely, MR reduced aadD, tetM, ermF and ermB concentrations by 59.49-98.58%, and reduced the total abundance of ARGs in the compost product by 49.32% compared to RH, which significantly restrained ARGs rebound. MR promoted secondary high temperature inactivation of potential host bacteria, including Ornithinibacter, Rhizobiales and Caldicoprobacter, which could harbor aadE, blaCTX-M02, and blaVEB. It also reduced the abundance of lignocellulose degrading bacteria of Firmicutes, which were potential hosts of aadD, tetX, ermF and vanHB. Moreover, MR reduced moisture and increased oxidation reduction potential (ORP) that promoted aadE, tetQ, tetW abatement. Furthermore, MR reduced 97.36% of total MGEs including Tn916/1545, IS613, Tp614 and intI3, which alleviated ARGs horizontal transfer. Overall finding proposed mature compost reflux as bulking agent was a simple method to suppress ARGs rebound and horizontal transfer, improve ARGs removal and reduce composting plant cost.202539798649
812360.9766The effect of bulk-biochar and nano-biochar amendment on the removal of antibiotic resistance genes in microplastic contaminated soil. Biochar amendment has significant benefits in removing antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in the soil. Nevertheless, there is little information on ARGs removal in microplastic contaminated soil. Herein, a 42-day soil microcosm experiment were carried out to study how two coconut shell biochars (bulk- and nano-size) eliminate soil ARGs with/without microplastic presence. The results showed that microplastic increased significantly the numbers and abundances of ARGs in soil at 14d of cultivation. And, two biochars amendment effectively inhibited soil ARGs spread whether or not microplastic was present, especially for nano-biochar which had more effective removal compared to bulk-biochar. However, microplastic weakened soil ARGs removal after applying same biochar. Two biochars removed ARGs through decreasing horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of ARGs, potential host-bacteria abundances, some bacteria crowding the eco-niche of hosts and promoting soil properties. The adverse effect of microplastic on ARGs removal was mainly caused by weakening mobile genetic elements (MGEs) removal, and by changing soil properties. Structural equation modeling (SEM) analysis indicated that biochar's effect on ARGs profile was changed by its size and microplastic presence through altering MGEs abundances. These results highlight that biochar amendment is still an effective method for ARGs removal in microplastic contaminated soil.202437907163
786970.9765Nano-CeO(2) activates physical and chemical defenses of garlic (Allium sativum L.) for reducing antibiotic resistance genes in plant endosphere. The transmission of manure- and wastewater-borne antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) to plants contributes to the proliferation of antimicrobial resistance in agriculture, necessitating effective strategies for preventing the spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) from ARB in the environment to humans. Nanomaterials are potential candidates for efficiently controlling the dissemination of ARGs. The present study investigated the abundance of ARGs in hydroponically grown garlic (Allium sativum L.) following nano-CeO(2) (nCeO(2)) application. Specifically, root exposure to nCeO(2) (1, 2.5, 5, 10 mg L(-1), 18 days) reduced ARG abundance in the endosphere of bulbs and leaves. The accumulation of ARGs (cat, tet, and aph(3')-Ia) in garlic bulbs decreased by 24.2-32.5 % after nCeO(2) exposure at 10 mg L(-1). Notably, the lignification extent of garlic stem-disc was enhanced by 10 mg L(-1) nCeO(2), thereby accelerating the formation of an apoplastic barrier to impede the upward transfer of ARG-harboring bacteria to garlic bulbs. Besides, nCeO(2) upregulated the gene expression related to alliin biosynthesis and increased allicin content by 15.9-16.2 %, promoting a potent antimicrobial defense for reducing ARG-harboring bacteria. The potential exposure risks associated with ARGs and Ce were evaluated according to the estimated daily intake (EDI). The EDI of ARGs exhibited a decrease exceeding 95 %, while the EDI of Ce remained below the estimated oral reference dose. Consequently, through stimulating physical and chemical defenses, nCeO(2) contributed to a reduced EDI of ARGs and Ce, highlighting its potential for controlling ARGs in plant endosphere within the framework of nano-enabled agrotechnology.202438570269
694380.9762Insights into the reduction of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and mobile antibiotic resistance genes by black soldier fly larvae in chicken manure. The increasing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) from animal manure has raised concerns about the potential threats to public health. The bioconversion of animal manure with insect larvae, such as the black soldier fly larvae (BSFL, Hermetia illucens [L.]), is a promising technology for quickly attenuating ARB while also recycling waste. In this study, we investigated BSFL conversion systems for chicken manure. Using metagenomic analysis, we tracked ARB and evaluated the resistome dissemination risk by investigating the co-occurrence of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), mobile genetic elements (MGEs), and bacterial taxa in a genetic context. Our results indicated that BSFL treatment effectively mitigated the relative abundance of ARB, ARGs, and MGEs by 34.9%, 53.3%, and 37.9%, respectively, within 28 days. Notably, the transferable ARGs decreased by 30.9%, indicating that BSFL treatment could mitigate the likelihood of ARG horizontal transfer and thus reduce the risk of ARB occurrence. In addition, the significantly positive correlation links between antimicrobial concentration and relative abundance of ARB reduced by 44.4%. Moreover, using variance partition analysis (VPA), we identified other bacteria as the most important factor influencing ARB, explaining 20.6% of the ARB patterns. Further analysis suggested that antagonism of other bacteria on ARB increased by 1.4 times, while nutrient competition on both total nitrogen and crude fat increased by 2.8 times. Overall, these findings provide insight into the mechanistic understanding of ARB reduction during BSFL treatment of chicken manure and provide a strategy for rapidly mitigating ARB in animal manure.202337832484
798990.9762Feasibility of sulfate-calcined eggshells for removing pathogenic bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes from landfill leachates. High abundance of human pathogen and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in landfill leachate has become an emerging threat against human health. Therefore, sulfate- and calcination-modified eggshells as green agricultural bioresource were applied to test the feasibility of removing pathogenic bacteria and ARGs from leachate. The highest removal of Escherichia coli (E. coil) and gentamycin resistant gene (gmrA) from artificial contaminated landfill leachate was achieved by the application of eggshell with combined treatment of sulfate and calcination. The 16S and gmrA gene copies of E. coil declined significantly from 1.78E8±8.7E6 and 4.12E8±5.9E6 copies mL(-1) to 1.32E7±2.6E6 and 2.69E7±7.2E6 copies mL(-1), respectively, within 24h dynamic adsorption equilibrium process (p<0.05). Moreover, according to the Langmuir kinetic model, the greatest adsorption amount (1.56×10(9) CFU E. coil per gram of modified eggshells) could be obtained at neutral pH of 7.5. The optimal adsorption eggshells were then screened to the further application in three typical landfill leachates in Nanjing, eastern China. Significant decrease in species and abundance of pathogenic bacteria and ARGs (tet, sul, erm, qnr, and ampC) indicated its great efficiency to purify landfill leachates. This study demonstrated that sulfate-calcined eggshells can be an environmentally-friendly and highly efficient bioadsorbent to the management of reducing dissemination risk of pathogen and ARGs in landfill leachate.201728343745
8065100.9761Synergistic enhancement effect of straw-earthworms in the reduction of sulfamethoxazole and antibiotic resistance genes. Soil antibiotic pollution is a global concern. It has been confirmed that straw or earthworm can enhance microbial degradation of antibiotics in soil. However, in the C/N transformation processes of soil ecosystems, straw and earthworms are closely interconnected. Whether their interaction can further enhance microbial degradation of antibiotic pollution and the underlying mechanisms remain to be explored. This study conducted a 90 days co-incubation experiment with four treatments: straw + earthworms + sulfamethoxazole (RS-EW-SMX), straw + SMX (RS-SMX), earthworms + SMX (EW-SMX), and SMX alone (SMX). Residual SMX, its degradation intermediates, and microbial communities were monitored at multiple timepoints. Results indicated an exponential decline in SMX degradation rates across treatments. By day 90, SMX was nearly completely degraded in all treatment groups. However, the combined effect of straw and earthworms significantly enhanced the degradation efficiency of SMX. During the rapid degradation phase, SMX in above four treatments decreased from 20.0 mg kg(-1) to 0.93, 1.88, 5.26 and 7.02 mg kg(-1), respectively at day 10. Furthermore, the RS-EW-SMX treatment promoted SMX transformation into low-molecular-weight intermediates and increased the relative abundance of SMX-degrading bacteria by 1.35, 2.01, and 2.17-fold compared to RS-SMX, EW-SMX, and SMX, respectively. SMX degradation efficiency exhibited a strong positive linear correlation with the relative abundance of degrading bacteria across all treatments (R(2) = 0.961). Concurrently, analysis revealed that straw presence facilitated the targeted enrichment of SMX-degrading bacteria within the earthworm gut, concomitant with a reduction in associated antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). This synergistic interaction between straw and earthworms, mediated through the gut microbiome and carbon utilization, constitutes a primary mechanism underpinning the accelerated SMX degradation observed. These findings reveal a novel macrofauna-plant residues interaction mechanism for improved in situ antibiotic bioremediation, providing practical solutions for soil pollution mitigation.202540914087
6944110.9760Rapidly mitigating antibiotic resistant risks in chicken manure by Hermetia illucens bioconversion with intestinal microflora. Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in animal manure are an environmental concern due to naturally occurring bacteria being exposed to these wastes and developing multidrug resistance. The bioconversion of manure with fly larvae is a promising alternative for recycling these wastes while attenuating ARGs. We investigated the impact of black soldier fly (BSF, Hermetia illucens) larval bioconversion of chicken manure on the persistence of associated ARGs. Compared with traditional composting or sterile larval treatments (by 48.4% or 88.7%), non-sterile BSF larval treatments effectively reduced ARGs and integrin genes by 95.0% during 12 days, due to rapid decreases in concentrations of the genes and associated bacteria as they passed through the larval gut and were affected by intestinal microbes. After larval treatments, bacterial community composition differed significantly, with the percentage of Firmicutes possibly carrying ARGs reduced by 65.5% or more. On average, human pathogenic bacteria populations declined by 70.7%-92.9%, effectively mitigating risks of these bacteria carrying ARGs. Environmental pH, nitrogen content and antibiotic concentrations were closely related to both bacterial community composition and targeted gene attenuation in larval systems. Selective pressures of larval gut environments with intestinal microbes, larval bacteriostasis and reformulation of manure due to larval digestion contributed to ARG attenuation.201830318817
6939120.9760Field ponding water exacerbates the dissemination of manure-derived antibiotic resistance genes from paddy soil to surrounding waterbodies. Farmlands fertilized with livestock manure-derived amendments have become a hot topic in the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Field ponding water connects rice paddies with surrounding water bodies, such as reservoirs, rivers, and lakes. However, there is a knowledge gap in understanding whether and how manure-borne ARGs can be transferred from paddy soil into field ponding water. Our studies suggest that the manure-derived ARGs aadA1, bla1, catA1, cmlA1-01, cmx(A), ermB, mepA and tetPB-01 can easily be transferred into field ponding water from paddy soil. The bacterial phyla Crenarchaeota, Verrucomicrobia, Cyanobacteria, Choloroflexi, Acidobacteria, Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, and Actinobacteria are potential hosts of ARGs. Opportunistic pathogens detected in both paddy soil and field ponding water showed robust correlations with ARGs. Network co-occurrence analysis showed that mobile genetic elements (MGEs) were strongly correlated with ARGs. Our findings highlight that manure-borne ARGs and antibiotic-resistant bacteria in paddy fields can conveniently disseminate to the surrounding waterbodies through field ponding water, posing a threat to public health. This study provides a new perspective for comprehensively assessing the risk posed by ARGs in paddy ecosystems.202337007487
8580130.9760Mitigation of microplastic-associated emerging pollutants by chlorination using field-collected microplastic: Antimicrobial-resistant genes and pathogens. The ubiquity of microplastics (MPs) in aquatic environments has raised significant concerns regarding their roles as vectors for antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs) and antibiotic-resistant pathogens (ARPs). This study investigated the mitigation of ARGs and ARPs associated with field-collected MPs through chlorination using free available chlorine (FAC) at varying concentrations. FAC effectively reduced the absolute abundance of ARGs on MPs by up to 99.69 %, although the relative abundance of certain ARGs persisted or increased after treatments. Results revealed that the three-dimensional structure of biofilms on MPs significantly influenced FAC efficacy, with interior biofilm bacteria demonstrating greater resistance than outer biofilm. Additionally, FAC induced fragmentation of MPs, particularly increasing the proportion of particles smaller than 100 μm. Notably, ARGs such as sul1 and ermB showed substantial reductions in absolute abundance, whereas ermC and sul2 exhibited less reduction, highlighting the complexity of disinfection in MP-associated biofilms. These findings underscore the need for optimizing disinfection strategies to mitigate ARG dissemination and address environmental risks posed by MPs in wastewater effluents.202540436100
7855140.9759Combat against antibiotic resistance genes during photo-treatment of magnetic Zr-MOFs@Layered double hydroxide heterojunction: Conjugative transfer risk mitigating and bacterial inactivation. The dissemination of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in wastewater treatment poses a severe threat to the global ecological environment. This study explored the effectiveness of photocatalysis in inactivating antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) and quantitatively clarified the inhibiting rate of the transfer of antibiotics resistance genes (ARGs). Herein, the magnetic heterojunction as UiO-66-NH(2)@CuFe LDH-Fe(3)O(4) (UN-66@LDH-Fe) effectively facilitated the electron-hole separation and accelerated the photogenerated charge transfer, thereby guaranteeing the stable practical application in aeration tanks. Notably, the internal electric field of heterogeneous photocatalyst resulted in significant increase of ARGs inactivation, achieving 5.63 log of ARB, 3.66 log of tetA and 3.57 log of Ampr genes were photodegraded under optimal reaction conditions within 6 h. Based on the complex microbial and molecular mechanism of multiple-ARB communities inactivation in photo-treatment, the photogenerated reactive oxygen species (ROSs, ·OH and ·O(2)(-)) effectively destroyed bacterial membrane protein, thereby the intracellular ROSs and redox cycles further induced oxidative stress, attributing to the abundance reduction of ARGs and their host bacteria. Moreover, long-term (7 days) continuous operation preliminarily verified the practical potential in reducing AMR spread and developing wastewater treatment efficacy. Overall, this study presented an advantageous synergistic strategy for mitigating the AMR-associated environmental risk in wastewater treatment.202540188541
7873150.9759Wheat straw pyrochar more efficiently decreased enantioselective uptake of dinotefuran by lettuce and dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes than hydrochar in an agricultural soil. Remediation of soils pollution caused by dinotefuran, a chiral pesticide, is indispensable for ensuring human food security. In comparison with pyrochar, the effect of hydrochar on enantioselective fate of dinotefuran, and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) profiles in the contaminated soils remain poorly understood. Therefore, wheat straw hydrochar (SHC) and pyrochar (SPC) were prepared at 220 and 500 °C, respectively, to investigate their effects and underlying mechanisms on enantioselective fate of dinotefuran enantiomers and metabolites, and soil ARG abundance in soil-plant ecosystems using a 30-day pot experiment planted with lettuce. SPC showed a greater reduction effect on the accumulation of R- and S-dinotefuran and metabolites in lettuce shoots than SHC. This was mainly resulted from the lowered soil bioavailability of R- and S-dinotefuran due to adsorption/immobilization by chars, together with the char-enhanced pesticide-degrading bacteria resulted from increased soil pH and organic matter content. Both SPC and SHC efficiently reduced ARG levels in soils, owing to lowered abundance of ARG-carrying bacteria and declined horizontal gene transfer induced by decreased dinotefuran bioavailability. The above results provide new insights for optimizing char-based sustainable technologies to mitigate pollution of dinotefuran and spread of ARGs in agroecosystems.202336996986
6938160.9758Assessment of the Effects of Biodegradable and Nonbiodegradable Microplastics Combined with Pesticides on the Soil Microbiota. Microplastics (MPs) and pesticides pose significant threats to the health of soil ecosystems. This study investigated the individual and combined effects of biodegradable polylactic acid (PLA) and nonbiodegradable polyethylene terephthalate (PET) microplastics alongside glyphosate and imidacloprid pesticides on soil microbial communities and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) via microcosm experiments. Compared with the control, PLA significantly increased microbial alpha diversity and enhanced microbial functions related to environmental information processing and metabolism. However, PLA also selectively enriched populations of beneficial and potentially pathogenic bacteria, whereas PET had comparatively weaker effects. Crucially, PLA exposure resulted in substantially higher total abundance and ecological risk levels of soil ARGs than did PET. Coexposure with pesticides further amplified these effects, with PLA demonstrating notable synergistic interactions with both glyphosate and imidacloprid. These findings challenge the conventional assumption that biodegradable MPs such as PLA are environmentally safer than nonbiodegradable MPs, thus highlighting their potential to induce more complex and potentially severe ecological risks under co-contamination scenarios with pesticides.202541175058
7929170.9757Size-dependent effects of microplastics on antibiotic resistance genes fate in wastewater treatment systems: The role of changed surface property and microbial assemblages in a continuous exposure mode. Microplastics (MPs) were continuously transported to wastewater treatment systems and accumulated in sludge constantly, potentially affecting systems function and co-occurrent contaminants fate. However, previous studies were based on acute exposure of MPs, which could not reflect the dynamics of MPs accumulation. Herein, this study firstly raised a more realistic method to evaluate the practical impacts of MPs on systems purification efficiency and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) fate. Continuous exposure of MPs did not pose negative effects on nutrients removal, but significantly changed the occurrence patterns of ARGs. ARGs abundances increased by 42.8 % and 54.3 % when exposed to millimeter-size MPs (mm-MPs) polyamide and polyethylene terephthalate, but increased by 31.3 % and 39.4 % to micron-size MPs (μm-MPs), respectively. Thus, mm-MPs posed severer effects on ARGs than μm-MPs. Further, mm-MPs surface properties were obviously altered after long-term exposure (higher specific surface area and O-containing species), which benefited microbes attachment. More importantly, more taxa linkages and changed topological properties (higher average degree and average weight) of co-occurrent network were observed in sludge with mm-MPs than with μm-MPs, as well as totally different potential host bacteria of ARGs. Rough surface of MPs and closer relations between ARGs and bacteria taxa contributed to the propagation of ARGs, which accounted for the observed higher ARGs abundances of mm-MPs. This study demonstrated that long-term accumulation of MPs in wastewater treatment systems affected ARGs fate, and mm-MPs caused severer risk due to their enrichment of ARGs. The results would promote the understanding of MPs real environmental behavior and influences.202236037899
6905180.9757The hot air circulation ventilation composting system removes antibiotic resistance genes through competitive inhibition by core bacteria. Livestock manure is a significant reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Aerobic composting technology can produce mature compost while effectively removing ARGs. In this study, we developed an energy-saving and emission-reducing hot air circulating ventilated composting technology (HACV), which had no adverse effects on the composting process or compost maturity. The HACV composting altered bacterial communities, primarily driven by heterogeneous selection among deterministic factors (65 %). Specifically, it increased the complexity of bacterial networks and promoted the colonization of high-temperature-tolerant bacteria, such as Erysipelothrix, Oceanobacillus and unclassified_f_Bacillaceae. Topological analysis revealed that core bacteria primarily functioned as connectors in composting, serving as important ARGs hosts and facilitating their spread in conventional composting. Among these, a core pathogenic bacterium (Corynebacterium) carried and transmitted ARGs with higher risks. In contrast, although the number of core bacteria (Bacillus, Oceanobacillus, Caldicoprobacter, Saccharomonospora, and Lactobacillus) increased during HACV composting, these bacteria were not potential hosts of the target ARGs. This contributed to the removal of aadE by 80.49 %. Consequently, compared to conventional composting, HACV composting was more effective at controlling risky ARGs, particularly aac(6')-Ib-cr and sul1. Furthermore, the ARGs removal mechanism primarily involved inhibiting horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in HACV composting, attributed to competition between core bacteria and ARGs hosts. In summary, HACV composting effectively promotes ARGs removal and reduces the risk of bacterial resistance. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATION: In this study, we developed an energy-saving and emission-reducing hot air circulation ventilation composting technology (HACV), which effectively removes antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). The HACV system maintained composting efficiency and maturity while driving bacterial community succession through deterministic processes (heterogeneous selection). HACV composting increased the colonization of core bacteria in the microbial network. Acting as connectors, the core bacteria are not hosts of ARGs in the HACV system, inhibiting horizontal gene transfer (HGT) and remove ARGs through competition with host bacteria.202540682888
7138190.9757Accumulation and translocation of antibiotic resistance genes in plants cultivated in hydroponic systems with nitrified biogas slurry. Hydroponic cultivation with biogas slurry supports nutrient recycling but raises biosafety concerns due to the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). This study established a hydroponic system using nitrified biogas slurry to grow lettuce and cherry radish, and systematically investigated the accumulation of ARGs, mobile genetic elements (MGEs), high-priority human pathogenic bacteria (HPBs), and virulence factors (VFs) in plant tissues. ARGs predominantly accumulated in roots (0.16 ∼ 0.23 copies/16S rRNA), significantly higher than in leaves (0.01 ∼ 0.11 copies/16S rRNA), with sul1 consistently enriched in the rhizosphere. Filtration pretreatment significantly reduced ARG and MGE levels in cherry radish roots by 30.78 % and 39.43 %, respectively (p < 0.05). ARGs strongly correlated with MGEs (R² = 0.97, p < 0.0001), indicating horizontal gene transfer as the key dissemination pathway. Co-occurrence network analysis revealed synergistic enrichment of ARGs and MGEs with HPBs and VFs, highlighting Acinetobacter baumannii and Streptococcus pneumoniae as potential core hosts. These findings demonstrate that ARG accumulation and spread in plants are affected by slurry treatment, plant species, and tissue specificity. While filtration mitigates risks, persistent ARGs in roots necessitate further monitoring. This study informs safe reuse strategies for biogas slurry in agriculture.202541076908