Critical insights into the Hormesis of antibiotic resistome in saline soil: Implications from salinity regulation

Soil is recognized as an important reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). However, the effect of salinity on the antibiotic resistome in saline soils remains largely misunderstood. In this study, high-throughput qPCR was used to investigate the impact of low-variable salinity levels on the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hazardous materials 2024-07, Vol.472, p.134616-134616, Article 134616
Hauptverfasser: Sun, Jianbin, Zhang, Dan, Peng, Shuang, Yang, Xiaoqian, Hua, Qingqing, Wang, Wei, Wang, Yiming, Lin, Xiangui
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Soil is recognized as an important reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). However, the effect of salinity on the antibiotic resistome in saline soils remains largely misunderstood. In this study, high-throughput qPCR was used to investigate the impact of low-variable salinity levels on the occurrence, health risks, driving factors, and assembly processes of the antibiotic resistome. The results revealed 206 subtype ARGs across 10 categories, with medium-salinity soil exhibiting the highest abundance and number of ARGs. Among them, high-risk ARGs were enriched in medium-salinity soil. Further exploration showed that bacterial interaction favored the proliferation of ARGs. Meanwhile, functional genes related to reactive oxygen species production, membrane permeability, and adenosine triphosphate synthesis were upregulated by 6.9%, 2.9%, and 18.0%, respectively, at medium salinity compared to those at low salinity. With increasing salinity, the driver of ARGs in saline soils shifts from bacterial community to mobile gene elements, and energy supply contributed 28.2% to the ARGs at extreme salinity. As indicated by the neutral community model, stochastic processes shaped the assembly of ARGs communities in saline soils. This work emphasizes the importance of salinity on antibiotic resistome, and provides advanced insights into the fate and dissemination of ARGs in saline soils. [Display omitted] •Salinity has a low-dose promoting and high-dose inhibiting effect on ARGs.•There are higher health risks of antibiotic resistance in soil with medium salinity.•Medium salinity promotes ARGs transfer based on bacterial metabolic pathways.•Drivers of ARGs shift from bacterial communities to MGEs with increasing salinity.•Stochastic processes dominate the ARGs community assembly in saline soil.
ISSN:0304-3894
1873-3336
DOI:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.134616