4.5 Article

Impacts of human activities on distribution of sulfate-reducing prokaryotes and antibiotic resistance genes in marine coastal sediments of Hong Kong

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femsec/fiw128

Keywords

environmental behavior; metagenome; microbial community; pollution

Categories

Funding

  1. Environment and Conservation Fund of the Hong Kong SAR Government [ECF 30/2014]
  2. Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong SAR Government, through a Collaborative Research Fund [HKU5/CRF/12G]

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Sulfate-reducing prokaryotes (SRPs) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in sediments could be biomarkers for evaluating the environmental impacts of human activities, although factors governing their distribution are not clear yet. By using metagenomic approach, this study investigated the distributions of SRPs and ARGs in marine sediments collected from 12 different coastal locations of Hong Kong, which exhibited different pollution levels and were classified into two groups based on sediment parameters. Our results showed that relative abundances of major SRP genera to total prokaryotes were consistently lower in the more seriously polluted sediments (P-value < 0.05 in 13 of 20 genera), indicating that the relative abundance of SRPs is a negatively correlated biomarker for evaluating human impacts. Moreover, a unimodel distribution pattern for SRPs along with the pollution gradient was observed. Although total ARGs were enriched in sediments from the polluted sites, distribution of single major ARG types could be explained neither by individual sediment parameters nor by corresponding concentration of antibiotics. It supports the hypothesis that the persistence of ARGs in sediments may not need the selection of antibiotics. In summary, our study provided important hints of the niche differentiation of SRPs and behavior of ARGs in marine coastal sediment.Distribution of sulfate-reducing prokaryotes and antibiotic resistance genes in marine sediments with different pollution levels revealed by metagenomic survey.Distribution of sulfate-reducing prokaryotes and antibiotic resistance genes in marine sediments with different pollution levels revealed by metagenomic survey.

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