Abstract

Gastrointestinal diseases caused by microbial contamination of water has been one of the enduring public health challenges of the mankind, wherefore demands continual innovation in the contemporary water treatment techniques. Here, a systematic study was carried out to elucidate the bactericidal mechanism of ultrasound assisted Fenton reaction (Sono-Fenton: SF) against multidrug resistant Acinetobacter baumannii. Inactivation of ≈5 × 106 CFU/mL of A. baumannii was achieved within 90 min of SF under weak acidic conditions using 20 mg L-1 of H2O2 and 2 mg L-1 of Fe2+. Having more than 99 % inactivation efficiency, no reactivation of the bacteria was observed for 96 h. After SF, a combination of ultrasound and H2O2 was found to be more efficient although complete inactivation was not achieved within the same time frame. Experimental evidence suggests the generation of multiple reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as H2O2, •OH and O2•–. The synergistic effect of ROS and ultrasound may have resulted in the membrane damage of the bacteria as evident from the electron microscopy analysis. Interestingly, our data also suggests that the residual stress associated with SF could have long term bactericidal effect and is influenced by incubation temperature. Comparative transcriptomic analysis showed that NirD/YgiW/YdeI family stress tolerance protein, KGG domain containing proteins, and PspC domain containing proteins, all known to control the stress induced responses in bacteria was significantly upregulated after SF treatment. Additionally, genes regulating transcription (GntR) and translation (rpsQ) have been downregulated which may induce a nutrient and metabolite limiting conditions in the bacterial cell. The bacterial inactivation ability of SF process was further validated with real water samples collected from natural systems and therefore, advocate the possible real-world applications.

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