Abstract

Dairy cattle are routinely treated with antibiotics, and the resulting manure or composted manure is commonly used as a soil amendment for crop production, raising questions regarding the potential for antibiotic resistance to propagate from "farm to fork." The objective of this study was to compare the microbiota and "resistomes" (i.e., carriage of antibiotic resistance genes [ARGs]) associated with lettuce leaf and radish taproot surfaces grown in different soils amended with dairy manure, compost, or chemical fertilizer only (control). Manure was collected from antibiotic-free dairy cattle (DC) or antibiotic-treated dairy cattle (DA), with a portion composted for parallel comparison. Amendments were applied to loamy sand or silty clay loam, and lettuce and radishes were cultivated to maturity in a greenhouse. Metagenomes were profiled via shotgun Illumina sequencing. Radishes carried a distinct ARG composition compared to that of lettuce, with greater relative abundance of total ARGs. Taxonomic species richness was also greater for radishes by 1.5-fold. The resistomes of lettuce grown with DC compost were distinct from those grown with DA compost, DC manure, or fertilizer only. Further, compost applied to loamy sand resulted in twofold-greater relative abundance of total ARGs on lettuce than when applied to silty clay loam. The resistomes of radishes grown with biological amendments were distinct from the corresponding fertilizer controls, but effects of composting or antibiotic use were not measureable. Cultivation in loamy sand resulted in higher species richness for both lettuce and radishes than when grown in silty clay loam by 2.2-fold and 1.2-fold, respectively, when amended with compost.IMPORTANCE A controlled, integrated, and replicated greenhouse study, along with comprehensive metagenomic analysis, revealed that multiple preharvest factors, including antibiotic use during manure collection, composting, biological soil amendment, and soil type, influence vegetable-borne resistomes. Here, radishes, a root vegetable, carried a greater load of ARGs and species richness than lettuce, a leafy vegetable. However, the lettuce resistome was more noticeably influenced by upstream antibiotic use and composting. Network analysis indicated that cooccurring ARGs and mobile genetic elements were almost exclusively associated with conditions receiving raw manure amendments, suggesting that composting could alleviate the mobility of manure-derived resistance traits. Effects of preharvest factors on associated microbiota and resistomes of vegetables eaten raw are worthy of further examination in terms of potential influence on human microbiomes and spread of antibiotic resistance. This research takes a step toward identifying on-farm management practices that can help mitigate the spread of agricultural sources of antibiotic resistance.

Highlights

  • Dairy cattle are routinely treated with antibiotics, and the resulting manure or composted manure is commonly used as a soil amendment for crop production, raising questions regarding the potential for antibiotic resistance to propagate from “farm to fork.” The objective of this study was to compare the microbiota and “resistomes” associated with lettuce leaf and radish taproot surfaces grown in different soils amended with dairy manure, compost, or chemical fertilizer only

  • The main objective of this study was to profile and compare the metagenomes, including microbiota and resistomes, of greenhouse-grown lettuce leaves and radish taproots cultivated with different soil types amended with manure from dairy cattle collected with typical administration of antibiotics (DA) and without typical administration of antibiotics (DC) or corresponding composts, compared to chemical-fertilizer-only controls

  • 47.7% of reads aligning to Comprehensive ARG Database (CARD) and 40.8% of reads aligning to antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs)-miner corresponded to multidrug ARGs

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Summary

Introduction

Dairy cattle are routinely treated with antibiotics, and the resulting manure or composted manure is commonly used as a soil amendment for crop production, raising questions regarding the potential for antibiotic resistance to propagate from “farm to fork.” The objective of this study was to compare the microbiota and “resistomes” (i.e., carriage of antibiotic resistance genes [ARGs]) associated with lettuce leaf and radish taproot surfaces grown in different soils amended with dairy manure, compost, or chemical fertilizer only (control). The main objective of this study was to profile and compare the metagenomes, including microbiota and resistomes, of greenhouse-grown lettuce leaves and radish taproots cultivated with different soil types (loamy sand [LS] and silty clay loam [SCL]) amended with manure from dairy cattle collected with typical administration of antibiotics (pirlimycin and cephapirin) (DA) and without typical administration of antibiotics (DC) or corresponding composts, compared to chemical-fertilizer-only controls. The greenhouse experimental design enabled a highly integrative study; simultaneously examining the effects of antibiotic use in livestock, manure treatment, biological soil amendment, soil texture, and vegetable type This provided an ideal means to compare the relative contributions of these factors toward shaping vegetable microbiomes and informing optimal management practices for reducing the potential for farm-to-fork transmission of antibiotic resistance

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