Abstract
Nowadays, antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) have been characterized as an emerging environmental contaminant, as the spread of ARGs may increase the difficulty of bacterial infection treatments. This study evaluates the combination of ultraviolet (UV) irradiation and chlorination, the two most commonly applied disinfection methods, on the degradation of sulphonamide resistance sul1 genes. The results revealed that although both of individual UV and chlorination processes were relatively less effective, two of the four combined processes, namely UV followed by chlorination (UV-Cl2) and simultaneous combination of UV and chlorination (UV/Cl2), delivered a better removal rate (up to 1.5 logs) with an observation of synergetic effects up to 0.609 log. The mechanisms analysis found that the difference of DNA size affected sul1 genes degradation by UV and chlorination; targeted genes on larger DNA fragments could be more effectively degraded by UV (1.09 logs for large fragments and 0.12 log for small fragments when UV dose reached 432 mJ/cm2), while to degrade ARGs on smaller DNA fragments required less free chlorine dosage (10 mg/L for small fragments and 40 mg/L for large fragments). The sequential combination of UV and chlorination (UV-Cl2) used the corresponding reactivity of both processes, which could be the reason for the synergetic effect. For UV/Cl2 process, the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) contributed to the synergetic effect. Scavenger analysis showed that the contribution of ROS to the sul1 gene reduction was 0.004 to 0.273 log (up to 45.5 % of the total synergy values), and among the two major reactive species in UV/Cl2 system, HO was the more important radical, while the contribution of Cl was negligible. Besides, UV/Cl2 process also used the corresponding reactivity of both processes to generate the remaining synergy values when excluding the contribution by reactive radicals. These findings provide a thorough understanding of the effects of UV and free chlorine on the degradation of ARGs and indicate the potential to utilize the combined processes of UV and free chlorine in water or wastewater treatment practice to control the dissemination of antibiotic resistance.
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