4.7 Article

Class 1 In-Tn5393c array contributed to antibiotic resistance of non-pathogenic Pseudoxanthomonas mexicana isolated from a wastewater bioreactor treating streptomycin

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 821, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.153537

Keywords

Pseudoxanthomonas mexicana; Streptomycin resistance; Class 1 In-Tn 5393c array; Whole genome sequencing; Proteomics

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This study investigated the emergence of antibiotic resistance in response to environmental pollutants during wastewater treatment. The non-pathogenic bacterium Pseudoxanthomonas mexicana exhibited strong resistance to streptomycin and other antibiotics. Genomic, transcriptional, and proteomic analysis revealed the molecular mechanisms underlying the development of antibiotic resistance in P. mexicana.
The emergence of antibiotic resistance in retort to environmental pollutants during wastewater treatment still remains elusive. Here, we first to investigate the emergence of antibiotic resistance in an environmental non-pathogenic bacterium, Pseudoxanthomonas mexicana isolated from a lab-scale bioreactor treating wastewater containing streptomycin. The molecular mechanism of antibiotic resistance development was evaluated in its genomic, transcriptional, and proteomic levels. The streptomycin resistant (SR) strain showed strong resistance to streptomycin (MIC > 600 mu g/mL) as well to sulfamethoxazole, ampicillin, and kanamycin (>= 250 mu g/mL). A 13.4 kb class-1-integron array consisting of a new arrangement of gene cassette (IS6100-sul1-aadA2-catB3-aacA1-2-aadB-int1-IS256-int) linked with Tn5393c transposon was identified in the SR strain, which has only been reported in clinical pathogens so far. iTRAQ-LC-MS/MS proteomics revealed 22 up-regulated proteins in the SR strain growing under 100 mg L-1 streptomycin, involving antibiotic resistance, toxin production, stress response, and ribosomal protein synthesis. At the mRNA level, elevated expressions of ARGs (strA, strB, and aadB) and 30S-ribosomal protein genes (rpsA and rpsU) were observed in the SR strain. The results highlighted the genomic plasticity and multifaceted regulatory mechanism employed by P. mexicana in adaptation to high-level streptomycin during biological wastewater treatment.

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