Abstract

High concentrations of antibiotics can exert strong selection pressures on the microbial community and promote the emergence and dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). The activated sludge reactors treating ampicillin, cephalexin and chloramphenicol production wastewater were established to investigate the responses of microbial community, ARGs and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) to antibiotics. Antibiotic selection pressures significantly declined the microbial diversity and changed microbial community structures. Based on metagenomic analysis, a total of 500 ARG subtypes affiliated with 18 ARG types were identified and 63 ARGs were shared by all samples. The substantial increase of ARG abundance and the shifts of ARG profiles were significantly correlated with antibiotic types and concentrations. The evident enrichment of non-corresponding ARG types suggested the strong co-selection effects of the target antibiotics. Additionally, metagenomic analysis revealed the occurrence of 104 MGEs belonging to various types and the five dominant MGEs were tnpA, intI1, tniA, tniB and IS91. The ARG–MGE co-occurrence associations implied the potential mobility of ARGs. Network analysis also demonstrated that five ARG types (aminoglycoside, beta-lactam, chloramphenicol, multidrug and tetracycline resistance genes) tended to co-occur internally and the obvious co-occurrence patterns among different ARG types indicated the potential for resistance co-selection. Moreover, 15 bacterial genera were speculated as the hosts of diverse ARGs. This study provides a comprehensive overview of the occurrence of ARGs and MGEs and is valuable for the risk assessment and management of antibiotic resistance.

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