AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the prevalence and behavior of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in aquatic environments, focusing on wastewater influents and effluents, as well as river water in Central Thailand.
  • Key findings indicated that certain ARGs, like intI1 and sul1, were consistently abundant across all locations, which could help monitor environmental health.
  • Although wastewater treatment plants reduced ARG concentrations, the persistence of these genes in treated water suggests that current methods are not fully effective, highlighting the need for better sanitation strategies.

Article Abstract

As antimicrobial resistance continues to pose a significant threat to global health, this study provided a focused examination of the prevalence and behavior of key antibiotic resistance genes in aquatic environments. We investigated the quantitative distribution of intI1, sul1, bla, bla, bla, mcr-1, tetQ, and crAssphage within wastewater influents (n = 12), effluents (n = 12) and river water samples (n = 12), from three municipal wastewater treatment plants and three river locations in an urbanized watershed in Central Thailand over dry and wet seasons. The qPCR method demonstrated that intI1, sul1, bla, and tetQ were the most abundant in all samples (2.71-7.89 mean log copies/100 mL), with all genes exhibiting consistently uniform levels across diverse locations, suggesting the potential for any site to act as a monitoring sentinel. Although there is a significant reduction of ARG concentrations by WWTPs (0.62 - >4.05 LRV), the persistence of these genes in effluents points to the limited effectiveness of existing treatment methodologies. Temporal data indicated stable ARG concentrations over time, but tetQ levels rose during the wet season, in alignment with the monsoonal climate in Thailand. Additionally, we identified crAssphage, a marker of human sewage contamination, exhibited strong correlations with the more abundant ARGs (rho 0.65 - 0.81), implying that human waste contributes significantly to the environmental burden of ARGs. The results of this research highlight the widespread nature of ARGs in water systems and the need for improved treatment and sanitation strategies to mitigate the public health threat posed by antimicrobial resistance.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.176569DOI Listing

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