Abstract
High bacterial community diversity and complexity greatly challenge the cost-efficient monitoring of clinically prevalent antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which are usually present as rare and important populations involved in the environmental dissemination of clinical resistance. Here, we introduce culture-enriched phenotypic metagenomics that integrates culture enrichment, phenotypic screening, and metagenomic analyses as an emerging standardized methodology for targeted resistome monitoring and apply it to decipher the extended-spectrum β-lactam resistome in a municipal wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) and its receiving river. The results showed that clinically prevalent carbapenemase genes (e.g., the NDM and KPC families) and extended-spectrum β-lactamase genes (e.g., the CTX-M, TEM, and OXA families) were prevalent in the WWTP and showed prominent potential in horizontal dissemination. Strikingly, carbapenem and polymyxin resistance genes co-occurred in the highly virulent nosocomial pathogens Enterobacter kobei and Citrobacter freundii. Overall, this study exemplifies phenotypic metagenomics for high-throughput surveillance of a targeted clinically important fraction of antibiotic resistomes and substantially expands current knowledge on extended-spectrum β-lactam resistance in WWTPs.
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