Abstract

Although several approaches for reducing antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in soil have been proposed, the application of environmentally friendly approaches is now attracting much more attention. In the present study, two types of essential oils (EOs), namely lavender essential oil (LEO) and oregano essential oil (OEO), were selected to investigate their roles in regulating ARGs in soil. In a 28-day microcosm experiment, it was found that the different types and doses of EOs significantly changed the composition of microbial communities. The LEO treatments enriched more taxa belonging to Actinobacteria than the control, whereas the low dose of OEO reduced Actinobacteria enrichment. Besides, the control and the treatments with a high dose of LEO and OEO all significantly enriched the functional pathways related to Human Diseases, which were positively associated with ARGs. However, the low dose of these EOs helped to reduce the pathways. Because of inhibition of the functional pathways and ARG hosts, the low dose of OEO reduce the ARGs related to antibiotic efflux by 71.8% and the resistance genes to multidrug by 56.4%, but these roles did not occur in LEO treatments. These outcomes provide practical and theoretical support for the application of EOs in remediating ARG-contaminated soils.

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