4.7 Article

Occurrence and diversity of antibiotic resistance in untreated hospital wastewater

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 621, Issue -, Pages 990-999

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.10.128

Keywords

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria; Antibiotic-resistance gene; Mobile genetic element; Gene cassette; Hospital wastewater

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [NSFC 21477035, NSFC 21277041, 5101049170806]
  2. Key Project of Natural Science of the Education Department of Henan Province of China [16A180029]
  3. PhD research startup foundation of Henan Normal University [qd15177]

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Antibiotics, antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB), antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs), and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) have been reported in many environments. However, the investigation of their occurrence and diversity in untreated hospital wastewater is still insufficient. High concentrations of antibiotic residues were found in hospital wastewater using solid-phase extraction and UPLC-MS/MS analysis. The concentrations of six of 14 antibiotics reached mu g/L levels in the hospital wastewater, which is higher than reported in other aquatic environments. Results of high-throughput sequencing analysis indicated that sequences affiliated to genera Escherichia and Acinetobacter were the predominant in the cultivable multiple-antibiotic-resistant bacteria (CMARB) recovered from the wastewater of three hospitals in China, with compositions of 34%-74%. Notably, several genera containing clinically pathogenic or opportunistic CMARB (e.g., Escherichia, Acinetobacter, Aeromonas, Myroides, Enterococcus, Proteus, Pseudomonas, and Streptococcus) were detected at high relative abundances in the wastewaters of the three hospitals. High-capacity quantitative PCR showed that 131-139 unique ARGs of the 178 targeted genes were detected in the hospital wastewaters. The high prevalence of five MGEs and 12 ARGs was confirmed with qPCR, and some positive correlations between ARGs and MGEs were identified, such as between intI1 and qnrD, intI2 and sul3, intI3 and tetX, Tn916/Tn1545 and sul2, and ISCR1 and sul3. These results suggest that highly abundant antibiotic-resistant pathogens and highly mobile ARGs already exist in the human body, and that their release from hospitals without effective treatment poses high risks to environments and human health. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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