Inhalable Antibiotic Resistome from Wastewater Treatment Plants to Urban Areas: Bacterial Hosts, Dissemination Risks, and Source Contributions

Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are commonly detected in the atmosphere, but questions remain regarding their sources and relative contributions, bacterial hosts, and corresponding human health risks. Here, we conducted a qPCR- and metagenomics-based investigation of inhalable fine particulate ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2022-06, Vol.56 (11), p.7040-7051
Hauptverfasser: Xie, Jiawen, Jin, Ling, Wu, Dong, Pruden, Amy, Li, Xiangdong
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creator Xie, Jiawen
Jin, Ling
Wu, Dong
Pruden, Amy
Li, Xiangdong
description Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are commonly detected in the atmosphere, but questions remain regarding their sources and relative contributions, bacterial hosts, and corresponding human health risks. Here, we conducted a qPCR- and metagenomics-based investigation of inhalable fine particulate matter (PM2.5) at a large wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) and in the ambient air of Hong Kong, together with an in-depth analysis of published data of other potential sources in the area. PM2.5 was observed with increasing enrichment of total ARGs along the coastal–urban–WWTP gradient and clinically relevant ARGs commonly identified in urban and WWTP sites, illustrating anthropogenic impacts on the atmospheric accumulation of ARGs. With certain kinds of putative antibiotic-resistant pathogens detected in urban and WWTP PM2.5, a comparable proportion of ARGs that co-occurred with MGEs was found between the atmosphere and WWTP matrices. Despite similar emission rates of bacteria and ARGs within each WWTP matrix, about 11–13% of the bacteria and >57% of the relevant ARGs in urban and WWTP PM2.5 were attributable to WWTPs. Our study highlights the importance of WWTPs in disseminating bacteria and ARGs to the ambient air from a quantitative perspective and, thus, the need to control potential sources of inhalation exposure to protect the health of urban populations.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.est.1c07023
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subjects Anthropogenic factors
Anthropogenic Impacts on the Atmosphere
Anti-Bacterial Agents - pharmacology
Antibiotic resistance
Antibiotics
Atmosphere
Bacteria
Bacteria - genetics
Genes, Bacterial
Health risks
Human influences
Humans
Inhalation
Metagenomics
Particulate emissions
Particulate Matter
Respiration
Urban areas
Urban populations
Waste Water - microbiology
Wastewater treatment
Wastewater treatment plants
Water Purification
Water treatment
title Inhalable Antibiotic Resistome from Wastewater Treatment Plants to Urban Areas: Bacterial Hosts, Dissemination Risks, and Source Contributions
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