1. Gamma-ray irradiation as an effective method for mitigating antibiotic resistant bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes in aquatic environments.
- Author
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Zhang, Ming-Qi, Zhang, Xiao-Yong, Zhang, Han-Chao, Qiu, Hai-Bin, Li, Zheng-Hao, Xie, Dong-Hua, Yuan, Li, and Sheng, Guo-Ping
- Subjects
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DRUG resistance in bacteria , *SEWAGE disposal plants , *EFFLUENT quality , *IRRADIATION , *ABSORBED dose - Abstract
The prevalence of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in municipal wastewater treatment plants (MWTPs) has emerged as a significant environmental concern. Despite advanced treatment processes, high levels of ARGs persist in the secondary effluent from MWTPs, posing ongoing environmental risks. This study explores the potential of gamma-ray irradiation as a novel approach for sterilizing antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and reducing ARGs in MWTP secondary effluent. Our findings reveal that gamma-ray irradiation at an absorbed dose of 1.6 kGy effectively deactivates all culturable bacteria, with no subsequent revival observed after exposure to 6.4 kGy and a 96-h incubation in darkness at room temperature. The removal efficiencies for a range of ARGs, including tetO , tetA , bla TEM-1 , sulI , sulII , and tetW , were up to 90.5% with a 25.6 kGy absorbed dose. No resurgence of ARGs was detected after irradiation. Additionally, this study demonstrates a considerable reduction in the abundances of extracellular ARGs, with the transformation efficiencies of extracellular tetracycline and sulfadiazine resistance genes decreasing by 56.3–81.8% after 25.6 kGy irradiation. These results highlight the effectiveness of gamma-ray irradiation as an advanced and promising method for ARB sterilization and ARG reduction in the secondary effluent of MWTPs, offering a potential pathway to mitigate environmental risks associated with antibiotic resistance. [Display omitted] • Gamma-ray irradiation reduced the abundances of ARGs by 1.69-3.69 logs. • Over 99% of VBNC bacteria were removed by Gamma-ray irradiation. • Gamma-ray irradiation reduced the transformation ability of released eARGs. • Direct action of irradiation was the major contributor to ARGs degradation. • Gamma-ray irradiation treatment improved the effluent quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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