Transfer of antibiotic multiresistant plasmid RP4 from escherichia coli to activated sludge bacteria
In situ transfer of a self-transmissible, antibiotic-multiresistant plasmid RP4 from a laboratory Escherichia coli strain C600 to indigenous activated sludge bacteria was investigated using filter mating. The transfer frequency of RP4 from the donor E. coli to the bacteria that was sampled from two...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of bioscience and bioengineering 2008-09, Vol.106 (3), p.292-296 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | In situ transfer of a self-transmissible, antibiotic-multiresistant plasmid RP4 from a laboratory
Escherichia coli strain C600 to indigenous activated sludge bacteria was investigated using filter mating. The transfer frequency of RP4 from the donor
E. coli to the bacteria that was sampled from two wastewater treatment plants was 5.1×10
−2 to 7.5×10
−1 and 4.6×10
−3 to 1.3×10
−2/potential recipient. The isolated transconjugants showed resistance to Ap, Km, and Tc and the presence of a plasmid with a similar size to RP4. The
traG gene on RP4 was also detected from all transconjugants. Reverse-transfer experiments from the transconjugants to
E. coli HB101 indicated that RP4 maintained self-transmissibility in the transconjugants. The transconjugant strains were dominant bacteria in activated sludge including
Pseudomonas fluorescens, P. putida, and
Ochrobactrum anthropi and minor populations of enteric bacterial strains including
Citrobacter freundii, E. coli, Enterobacter cloacae, E. asburiae, and
Klebsiella pneumoniae ssp.
pneumoniae. The transconjugant strains
K. pneumoniae ssp.
pneumonia, E. cloacae, and
E. asburiae had several naturally occurring plasmids. These results suggest that
in situ transfer of plasmids and the exchange of antibiotic-resistant genes can occur between released and indigenous bacteria in activated sludge. |
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ISSN: | 1389-1723 1347-4421 |
DOI: | 10.1263/jbb.106.292 |