Abstract

The emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance have been considered as a global health threat. However, effective methods to identify antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) in complex microbial community are lacking, and the potential transmission pathways of ARB and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in the soil-plant system remain scarce. Here in this study, tetracycline was chosen as the target antibiotic due to its globally wide usage and clinical significance. DNA-based stable isotope probing with H218O was applied to identify the tetracycline-resistant bacteria from soil-plant systems. Eighteen-year organic fertilization significantly changed the composition of the tetracycline-resistant microbiome in the soil-wheat system and resulted in a higher relative abundance of ARGs in the wheat endophyte. Rhizosphere harboring the most diverse ARGs and mobile genetic elements was identified as a hot spot for horizontal gene transfer and an important bridge between bulk soil and wheat endophyte. Micrococcaceae and Sphingomonadaceae carrying ARGs associated with abundant mobile genetic elements, were identified as the core bacterial taxa in long-term manure-amended and untreated soil-wheat systems, respectively. This method contributes to a more precise track of ARB in the environment, and our work depicts the high potential of ARG transfer in the rhizosphere mediated by the core species.

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