4.7 Article

A quaternary ammonium salt grafted tannin-based flocculant boosts the conjugative transfer of plasmid-born antibiotic resistance genes: The nonnegligible side of their flocculation-sterilization properties

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 901, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.166515

Keywords

Tannin; Flocculation; Sterilization; Antibiotic resistance genes; Conjugative transfer

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This study developed dual-function tannin-based flocculants with enhanced flocculation-sterilization properties and examined their impacts on bacterial proliferation and transformation of antibiotic resistance genes during the flocculation-deposition process. The results showed that the tannin-based flocculants exhibited remarkable flocculation and sterilization capacities towards bacteria. The frequencies of antibiotic resistance genes transfer were increased in bacterial flocs, which was attributed to bacterial aggregation, enhanced cell membrane permeability, stress response, and up-regulated genes encoding plasmid transfer.
This study developed dual-function tannin-based flocculants, namely tannin-graft-acrylamide-diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride (TGCC-A/TGCC-C), endowed with enhanced flocculation-sterilization properties. The impacts of these flocculants on proliferation and transformation of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) among bacteria during the flocculation-deposition process were examined. TGCC-A/TGCC-C exhibited remarkable flocculation capacities towards both Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus, encompassing a logarithmic range of initial cell density (108-109 CFU/mL) and a broad pH spectrum (pH 2-11). The grafted quaternary ammonium salt groups played pivotal parts in flocculation through charge neutralization and bridging mechanisms, concurrently contributing to sterilization by disrupting cellular membranes. The correlation between flocculation and sterilization entails a sequential progression, where an excess of TGCC, initially employed for flocculation, is subsequently consumed for sterilization purposes. The frequencies of ARGs conjugative transfer were enhanced in bacterial flocs across all TGCC treatments, stemming from augmented bacterial aggregation and cell membrane permeability, elicited stress response, and up-regulated genes encoding plasmid transfer. These findingsunderscore the indispensable role of flocculation-sterilization effects in mediating the propagation of ARGs, consequently providing substantial support for the scientific evaluation of the environmental risks associated with flocculants in the context of ARGs dissemination during the treatment of raw water featuring high bacterial density.

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