Abstract

Agricultural waterways are often contaminated with herbicide and antibiotic residues due to the widespread use of these chemicals in modern agriculture. The search for resistant bacterial strains that can adapt to and degrade these mixed contaminants is essential for effective in situ bioremediation. Herein, by integrating chemical and transcriptomic analyses, we shed light on mechanisms through which Paenarthrobacter sp. AT5, a well-known atrazine-degrading bacterial strain, can adapt to sulfamethoxazole (SMX) while degrading atrazine. When exposed to SMX and/or atrazine, strain AT5 increased the production of extracellular polymeric substances and reactive oxygen species, as well as the rate of activity of antioxidant enzymes. Atrazine and SMX, either alone or combined, increased the expression of genes involved in antioxidant responses, multidrug resistance, DNA repair, and membrane transport of lipopolysaccharides. Unlike atrazine alone, co-exposure with SMX reduced the expression of genes encoding enzymes involved in the lower part of the atrazine degradation pathway. Overall, these findings emphasize the complexity of bacterial adaptation to mixed herbicide and antibiotic residues and highlight the potential of strain AT5 in bioremediation efforts.

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