Deciphering the impact of organic loading rate and digestate recirculation on the occurrence patterns of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes in dry anaerobic digestion of kitchen waste
•Low OLR promoted ARGs spread by boosting ARB proliferation and functional profiles.•System instability can induce the accumulation of antibiotics, ARGs, and HPB.•A high OLR operation without digestate recirculation enriched HPB and MGEs.•Digestate recirculation reduced antibiotics abundance by 19.6...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Water research (Oxford) 2024-09, Vol.261, p.122005, Article 122005 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Low OLR promoted ARGs spread by boosting ARB proliferation and functional profiles.•System instability can induce the accumulation of antibiotics, ARGs, and HPB.•A high OLR operation without digestate recirculation enriched HPB and MGEs.•Digestate recirculation reduced antibiotics abundance by 19.66–31.69 % at high OLR.•Digestate recirculation reduced effects of functional profiles and ARBs on ARGs HGT.
Organic loading rate (OLR) is crucial for determining the stability of dry anaerobic digestion (AD). Digestate recirculation contributes to reactor stability and enhances methane production. Nevertheless, the understanding of how OLR and digestate recirculation affect the abundance and diversity of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), as well as the mechanisms involved in the dissemination of ARGs, remains limited. This study thoroughly investigated this critical issue through a long-term pilot-scale experiment. The metabolome analyses revealed the enrichment of various antibiotics, such as aminoglycoside, tetracycline, and macrolide, under low OLR conditions (OLR ≤ 4.0 g·VS/L·d) and the reactor instability. Antibiotics abundance decreased by approximately 19.66–31.69 % during high OLR operation (OLR ≥ 6.0 g·VS/L·d) with digestate recirculation. The metagenome analyses demonstrated that although low OLR promoted reactor stability, it facilitated the proliferation of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, such as Pseudomonas, and triggered functional profiles related to ATP generation, oxidative stress response, EPS secretion, and cell membrane permeability, thereby facilitating horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of ARGs. However, under stable operation at an OLR of 6.0 g·VS/L·d, there was a decrease in ARGs abundance but a notable increase in human pathogenic bacteria (HPB) and mobile genetic elements (MGEs). Subsequently, during reactor instability, the abundance of ARGs and HPB increased. Notably, during digestate recirculation at OLR levels of 6.0 and 7.0 g·VS/L·d, the process attenuated the risk of ARGs spread by reducing the diversity of ARGs hosts, minimizing interactions among ARGs hosts, ARGs, and MGEs, and weakening functional profiles associated with HGT of ARGs. Overall, digestate recirculation aids in reducing the abundance of antibiotics and ARGs under high OLR conditions. These findings provide advanced insights into how OLR and digestate recirculation affect the occurrence patterns of antibiotics and ARGs in dry AD.
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ISSN: | 0043-1354 1879-2448 1879-2448 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.watres.2024.122005 |