Abstract

The overuse or abuse of antibiotics as veterinary medicine and growth promoters accelerates antibiotic resistance, creating a serious threat to public health in the world. Swine liquid manure as an important reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) has received much attention, but little information is known regarding the occurrence, persistence and fate of ARGs-associated mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in swine farms, especially their change patterns and removal in full-scale piggery wastewater treatment systems (PWWTSs). In this study, we searched the presence and distribution of MGEs and associated ARGs in swine farms, and addressed their fate and seasonal variation in full-scale PWWTSs by real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR). Our results revealed class 1 integrons, class 2 integrons and conjugative plasmids were prevalent in pig feces and piggery wastewater. A clear pattern of these MGE levels in swine liquid manure was also observed, i.e., intI1 > intI2 > traA (p < 0.01), and their absolute abundances in winter were all higher than that in summer with 0.07–2.23 logs. Notably, MGEs and ARGs prevailed through various treatment units of PWWTSs, and considerable levels of them were present in the treated effluent discharged from swine farms (up to 101–107 copies/mL for MGEs and 103–108 copies/mL for ARGs). There were significant correlations between most ARG abundance and MGE levels (p < 0.05), such as tetQ and traA (r = 0.775), sul1 and intI1 (r = 0.847), qnrS and inI2 (r = 0.859), suggesting the potential of ARGs—horizontal transfer. Thus the high prevalence and enrichment of MGEs and ARGs occurred in pig feces and piggery wastewater, also implicating that swine liquid manure could be a hotspot for horizontal transfer of ARGs.

Highlights

  • The overuse or abuse of antibiotics as veterinary medicine and growth promoters accelerates antibiotic resistance, creating a serious threat to public health in the world

  • We found that traA, intI1 and intI2 had a detection frequency of 100% (42/42) in all pig feces and piggery wastewater samples

  • This study provided a comprehensive insight in the occurrence, abundance and fate of mobile genetic elements (MGEs) and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) occurring in Chinese large-scale swine farms with different piggery wastewater treatment systems

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Summary

Introduction

The overuse or abuse of antibiotics as veterinary medicine and growth promoters accelerates antibiotic resistance, creating a serious threat to public health in the world. Swine liquid manure as an important reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) has received much attention, but little information is known regarding the occurrence, persistence and fate of ARGs-associated mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in swine farms, especially their change patterns and removal in full-scale piggery wastewater treatment systems (PWWTSs). The high prevalence and enrichment of MGEs and ARGs occurred in pig feces and piggery wastewater, implicating that swine liquid manure could be a hotspot for horizontal transfer of ARGs. Nowadays, antibiotics have been widely used worldwide, especially in modern animal husbandry, where they are often used as veterinary drugs for the therapy of infectious diseases, like sulfonamides, quinolones, and ­macrolides[1,2]. That the presence of antibiotics at low concentrations can accelerate horizontal transfer and dissemination of environmental ­ARGs28, which further increases the prevalence of ARGs in the environment. Determining this information is essential and critical to understanding and preventing the dissemination of animal-derived ARGs in the environment

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