Abstract

Benzethonium chloride (BEC) is one of emerging bacteriostatic agents. BEC-bearing wastewater generated during sanitary applications in food and medication is easily combined with other wastewater streams to flow into wastewater treatment plants. This study focused on the long-term (231 days) impacts of BEC on the sequencing moving bed biofilm nitrification system. Nitrification performance was tolerant to low concentration of BEC (≤ 0.2 mg/L), but the nitrite oxidation was severely inhibited when the concentration of BEC was 1.0–2.0 mg/L. Partial nitrification maintained about 140 days with nitrite accumulation ratio over 80%, mainly caused by the inhibition of Nitrospira, Nitrotoga and Comammox. Notably, BEC exposure in the system might cause the co-selection of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and disinfectant resistance genes (DRGs), and the resistance of biofilm system to BEC was strengthened by efflux pumps mechanism (qacEdelta1 and qacH) and antibiotic deactivation mechanism (aadA, aac(6′)-Ib and blaTEM). Extracellular polymeric substances secretion and BEC biodegradation were also contributed to the system microorganisms resisting BEC exposure. In addition, Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Citrobacter and Pseudomonas were isolated and identified as BEC degrading bacteria. The metabolites of N,N-dimethylbenzylamine, N-benzylmethylamine and benzoic acid were identified, and the biodegradation pathway of BEC was proposed. This study brought new knowledge about the fate of BEC in biological treatment units and laid a foundation for its elimination from wastewater.

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