To address the challenge of antibiotic-containing wastewater, a novel micromagnetic carrier-modified integrated fixed-film activated sludge system (MC-IFAS) was developed for treating tetracycline (TC)-containing swine wastewater in this study. The magnetic effects of the MC significantly enhanced TC removal by improving TC biosorption and biodegradation in both the suspended activated sludge and the carrier-attached biofilm in the MC-IFAS. The increased electrostatic attraction and number of binding sites in both the activated sludge and the biofilm enhanced their TC biosorption capacities, particularly in the activated sludge. Additionally, the MC shifted microbial community assembly from stochastic to deterministic factors, amplifying the selection pressure induced by TC on the microbial community, thus enriching organic compound-degrading genera Dokdonella and TM7a; it also stimulated ammonia monooxygenase-mediated and cytochrome P450-mediated TC metabolisms and upregulated functional genes encoding lyases, transferases, hydrolases, and oxidoreductases- all of which enhanced TC biodegradation capacity in the MC-IFAS, particularly in the biofilm. While enhancing TC removal efficiency, the MC mitigated the proliferation and dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) by suppressing the abundances of ARGs hosts, the mobile genetic element intI1, and genes encoding ATP-binding cassette transporters and putative transposases. This study provides novel insights into the large-scale applications of magnetic field-enhanced TC removal strategies.

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