4.7 Article

Enantioselective effect of the chiral fungicide tebuconazole on the microbiota community and antibiotic resistance genes in the soil and earthworm gut

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 897, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.165381

Keywords

Tebuconazole; Enantioselectivity; Microbiota community; Antibiotic resistance genes

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Tebuconazole, consisting of two enantiomers, has a high detectable rate in the soil and may pose a risk to the microbiota community. Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are considered emerging environmental contaminants and can be transferred between microbiota in the soil. The enantioselective effects of tebuconazole on microbiota community and ARGs in the soil and earthworm gut are largely unknown.
Tebuconazole, consisting of two enantiomers, has a high detectable rate in the soil. The residue of tebuconazole in the soil may cause risk to microbiota community. Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are considered as emerging environmental contaminants, and they can be transferred vertically and horizontally between microbiota community in the soil. Until now, the enantioselective effect of tebuconazole on the microbiota community and ARGs in the soil and earthworm gut has remained largely unknown. Tebuconazole enantiomers showed different bioconcentration behaviors in earthworms. The relative abundances of bacteria belonging to Actinobacteriota, Crenarchaeota and Chloroflexi in R-(-)-tebuconazole-treated soil were higher than those in S-(+)-tebuconazole-treated soil at same concentrations. In the earthworm gut, bacteria belonging to Proteobacteria and Bacteroidota exhibited different relative abundances between the S-(+)-tebuconazole and R-(-)-tebuconazole treatments. The numbers and abundances of ARGs in the soil treated with fungicides were higher than those in the control. In earthworm gut, the diversities of ARGs in all treatments were higher than that in the control, and the relative abundances of Aminoglycoside, Chloramphenicol, Multidrug resistance genes and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in R-(-)-tebuconazole-treated earthworm gut were higher than those in S-(+)-tebuconazole-treated earthworm gut. Most of ARGs showed a significantly positive correlation with MGEs. Based on network analysis, many ARGs may be carried by bacteria belonging to Bacteroidota and Proteobacteria. These results provide valuable information for understanding the enantioselective effect of tebuconazole on the microbiota community and ARGs.

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