Antibiotic contamination in the environment has significant adverse effects on benthic microorganisms, which causes dysfunction of normal ecological processes. However, in-depth molecular mechanisms underlying the potential ecological impacts of these emerging pollutants are poorly understood. In this study, metabolic perturbations in a freshwater microalga, Desmodesmus quadricauda by sulfacetamide (SFM) were investigated using transcriptomics. The results found 28 genes in the tricarboxylic acid cycle and oxidative phosphorolysis pathways were significantly downregulated by 3.97 to 6.07, and 2.47 to 5.99 folds by 0.1 and 1 mg L SFM, respectively. These results indicated that SFM disrupted the microalgal cellular activities through inhibition of energy metabolism. Whilst, the upregulated genes have been most enriched in porphyrin and chlorophyll metabolism (hemE, hemL, hemY, chlD, chlP, PAO, and CAO), and arachidonic acid metabolism (GGT1_5 and gpx). Expression of these genes was significantly upregulated by up to 3.36 times for tolerance against SFM. Moreover, the genes encoding decarboxylase, oxidoreductases, α-amylase, hydrolases, O-acetyltransferase, and lyase were upregulated by >2 folds, which can induce di/hydroxylation, decarboxylation, bond cleavage and deamination. These findings provide insights into the molecular mechanisms of the ecotoxicological effects of antibiotics on microalgae, and supply useful information for their environmental risk assessment and management.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154436DOI Listing

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