Abstract
Wastewater is a reservoir of pathogens and hotspots for disseminating antibiotic resistance genes across species. The metagenomic surveillance of wastewater provides insight into the native microbial community, antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs) and mobile genetic elements. t. The COVID-19 pandemic has caused wider dissemination of ARGs and resistant bacteria in wastewater. Although immensely significant, no research has been performed on the Malaysian wastewater microbial community and ARGs or their correlation with COVID-19 infections. This study utilised a 16S metagenomics approach to characterise the microbial community in Malaysian wastewater during high and low-case phases of the pandemic. Bacteria belonging to Bacteriodales, Bacillales, Actinomycetales and opportunistic pathogens-Arcobacters, Flavobacteria, and Campylobacterales, Neisseriales, were enriched during higher COVID-19 pandemic (active cases). Additionally, copy number profiling of ARGs in water samples showed the prevalence of elements conferring resistance to antibiotics like sulphonamides, cephalosporins, and colistin. The high prevalence of intI1 and other ion-based transporters in samples highlights an extensive risk of horizontal gene transfer to previously susceptible species. Our study emphasises the importance of wastewater surveillance in understanding microbial community dynamics and ARG dissemination, particularly during public health crises like the COVID-19 pandemic.
Published Version
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