Abstract

Reuse of municipal-treated wastewater for agricultural irrigation is becoming increasingly prevalent due to growing demand and decline in freshwater supplies. However, the microbial contamination profile, including antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), virulence factors (VFs), and human bacterial pathogens (HBPs) in agricultural soil irrigated with municipal-treated wastewater for paddy cultivation, was unknown. Here, metagenomic analysis was applied to provide a systematic insight into the resistome, VFs and HBPs in paddy soils irrigated with municipal-treated wastewater. The obtained results revealed that the residual antibiotics in municipal-treated wastewater has an impact on the antibiotic resistome by increasing both the total number and abundance of ARGs. Furthermore, it was found that sul1 could serve as a potential risk indicator for assessing ARG contamination. VFs, core HBP abundance, and dangerous pathogens remain unaffected by municipal-treated wastewater irrigation for paddy. The good coexistence patterns of ARGs-HBPs and ARGs-VFs demonstrated the presence of resistant pathogenic bacteria. The network analysis revealed that ARGs-bearing Legionella pneumophila, Mycobacterium marinum, Bordetella pertussis, Staphylococcus aureus, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa might be ranked as high-risk HBPs. Additionally, our investigation also demonstrated that reuse of municipal-treated wastewater for agricultural irrigation had no detrimental effects on rice plant growth and grain quality. This study was the first to investigate the response of VFs and HBPs in paddy soil under long-term municipal-treated wastewater irrigation. The obtained results provide a scientific basis for the safe application of municipal-treated wastewater.

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