Metagenomic insights into plasmid-mediated antimicrobial resistance in poultry slaughterhouse wastewater: antibiotics occurrence and genetic markers
Slaughterhouse wastewater represents important convergence and concentration points for antimicrobial residues, bacteria, and antibiotic resistance genes (ARG), which can promote antimicrobial resistance propagation in different environmental compartments. This study reports the assessment of the me...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental science and pollution research international 2024-11, Vol.31 (51), p.60880-60894 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Slaughterhouse wastewater represents important convergence and concentration points for antimicrobial residues, bacteria, and antibiotic resistance genes (ARG), which can promote antimicrobial resistance propagation in different environmental compartments. This study reports the assessment of the metaplasmidome-associated resistome in poultry slaughterhouse wastewater treated by biological processes, employing metagenomic sequencing. Antimicrobial residues from a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) that treats poultry slaughterhouse influents and effluents were investigated through high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC–MS/MS). Residues from the macrolide, sulfonamide, and fluoroquinolone classes were detected, the latter two persisting after the wastewater treatment. The genetic markers 16S rRNA
rrs
(bacterial community) and
uidA
(
Escherichia coli
) were investigated by RT-qPCR and the
sul1
and
int1
genes by qPCR. After treatment, the 16S rRNA
rrs
,
uidA
,
sul1
, and
int1
markers exhibited reductions of 0.67, 1.07, 1.28, and 0.79 genes copies, respectively, with no statistical significance (
p
> 0.05). The plasmidome-focused metagenomics sequences (MiSeq platform (Illumina®)) revealed more than 100 ARG in the WWTP influent, which can potentially confer resistance to 14 pharmacological classes relevant in the human and veterinary clinical contexts, in which the
qnr
gene (resistance to fluoroquinolones) was the most prevalent. Only 7.8% of ARG were reduced after wastewater treatment, and the remaining 92.2% were associated with an increase in the prevalence of ARG linked to multidrug efflux pumps, substrate-specific for certain classes of antibiotics, or broad resistance to multiple medications. These data demonstrate that wastewater from poultry slaughterhouses plays a crucial role as an ARG reservoir and in the spread of AMR into the environment. |
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ISSN: | 1614-7499 0944-1344 1614-7499 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11356-024-35287-2 |