Abstract

The presence of antibiotics can exert significant selection pressure on the emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB). However, co-selection effects for ARGs, the mobility of ARGs and the identification of ARG hosts under high antibiotic selection pressures are poorly understood. Here, metagenomic assembly and binning approaches were used to comprehensively decipher the prevalence of ARGs and their potential mobility and hosts in activated sludge reactors treating antibiotic production wastewater. We found the abundance of different ARG types in antibiotic treatments varied greatly and certain antibiotic pressure promoted the co-selection for the non-corresponding types of ARGs. Antibiotic selection pressures significantly increased the abundance and proportions of ARGs mediated by plasmids (57.9%), which were more prevalent than those encoded in chromosomes (19.2%). The results indicated that plasmids and chromosomes had a tendency to carry different types of ARGs. Moreover, higher co-occurrence frequency of ARGs and MGEs revealed that antibiotics enhanced the mobility potential of ARGs mediated by both plasmids and integrative and conjugative elements. Among the 689 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) with high estimated quality, 119 MAGs assigning to nine bacterial phyla were identified as the ARG hosts and 33 MAGs exhibited possible multi-resistance to antibiotics. Some ARG types tended to be carried by certain bacteria (e.g. bacitracin resistance genes carried by the family Burkholderiaceae) and thus showed a pronounced host-specific pattern. This study enhances the understanding of the mobility and hosts of ARGs and provides important insights into the risk assessment and management of antibiotic resistance.

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