Characterization of microbial contamination in agricultural soil: A public health perspective.

Sci Total Environ

International Science and Technology Cooperation Platform for Low-Carbon Recycling of Waste and Green Development & Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Solid Waste Treatment and Recycling, School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Zhejiang Gongshang University, Hangzhou 310012, China. Electronic address:

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Soil is a significant source of microbial contaminants, including antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and harmful bacteria, posing public health risks.
  • This study compared dryland soils (for crops like vegetables and corn) with submerged soils (used for rice and crab farming) and found that submerged soils had more harmful bacteria and higher levels of dangerous ARGs.
  • The research highlighted that 11 high-risk bacterial pathogens were closely associated with ARGs in submerged soils, indicating a greater ecological and human health risk compared to dryland soils.

Article Abstract

Soil is widely recognized as a reservoir of microbial contaminants including antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and human bacterial pathogens (HBPs), which are major public health concerns. Although the risks associated with soil safety in different soil habitats have been studied, the results are not comprehensive. In this study, dryland soils used for vegetable, corn, and soybean planting, and submerged soils used for rice planting and crab farming were collected and subjected to metagenomic sequencing to characterize HBPs, ARGs, and virulence factor genes (VFGs). The results showed that submerged soils had a higher abundance of HBP than dryland soils. In addition, the submerged soil microbiome acquired significantly higher levels of high-risk ARGs than the dryland soil microbiome and these ARGs were mainly assigned to bacA, sul1, and aadA genes submerged. Network analysis revealed that 11 HBPs, including Yersinia enterocolitica, Vibrio cholerae, Escherichia coli, and Leptospira interrogans, were high-risk because of their close association with ARGs, VFGs, and mobile genetic elements (MGEs). Procrustes and network analyses showed that HBPs and ARGs were more closely linked in submerged soil. This study confirms that submerged field has higher ecological environment risk and human health risk than dryland soil.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.169139DOI Listing

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