4.8 Article

Metagenomic and Machine Learning Meta-Analyses Characterize Airborne Resistome Features and Their Hosts in China Megacities

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 43, Pages 16414-16423

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.3c02593

Keywords

airborne environments; antibiotic resistance; putative human pathogenic bacteria; machine learning classification; microbial assembly process

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Urban ambient air contains antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) emitted from various anthropogenic sites. This study found that the ARGs in the air exhibit site-specificity, with the most apparent resistance found in hospital air. The majority of the site-specific resistant genes were identified as pathogenic taxa, highlighting the enduring antibiotic resistance hazards in urban air.
Urban ambient air contains a cocktail of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) emitted from various anthropogenic sites. However, what is largely unknown is whether the airborne ARGs exhibit site-specificity or their pathogenic hosts persistently exist in the air. Here, by retrieving 1.2 Tb metagenomic sequences (n = 136), we examined the airborne ARGs from hospitals, municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) and landfills, public transit centers, and urban sites located in seven of China's megacities. As validated by the multiple machine learning-based classification and optimization, ARGs' site-specificity was found to be the most apparent in hospital air, with featured resistances to clinical-used rifamycin and (glyco)peptides, whereas the more environmentally prevalent ARGs (e.g., resistance to sulfonamide and tetracycline) were identified being more specific to the nonclinical ambient air settings. Nearly all metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) that possessed the site-featured resistances were identified as pathogenic taxa, which occupied the upper-representative niches in all the neutrally distributed airborne microbial community (P < 0.01, m = 0.22-0.50, R-2 = 0.41-0.86). These niche-favored putative resistant pathogens highlighted the enduring antibiotic resistance hazards in the studied urban air. These findings are critical, albeit the least appreciated until our study, to gauge the airborne dimension of resistomes' features and fates in urban atmospheric environments.

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