Issue 8, 2018

Small and large-scale distribution of four classes of antibiotics in sediment: association with metals and antibiotic resistance genes

Abstract

Antibiotic chemicals and antibiotic resistance genes enter the environment via wastewater effluents as well as from runoff from agricultural operations. The relative importance of these two sources, however, is largely unknown. The relationship between the concentrations of chemicals and genes requires exploration, for antibiotics in the environment may lead to development or retention of resistance genes by bacteria. The genes that confer resistance to metal toxicity may also be important in antibiotic resistance. In this work, concentrations of 19 antibiotics (using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry), 14 metals (using inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry), and 45 metal, antibiotic, and antibiotic-resistance associated genes (using a multiplex, microfluidic quantitative polymerase chain reaction method) were measured in 13 sediment samples from two large rivers as well as along a spatial transect in a wastewater effluent-impacted lake. Nine of the antibiotics were detected in the rivers and 13 were detected in the lake. Sixteen different resistance genes were detected. The surrounding land use and proximity to wastewater treatment plants are important factors in the number and concentrations of antibiotics detected. Correlations among antibiotic chemical concentrations, metal concentrations, and resistance genes occur over short spatial scales in a lake but not over longer distances in major rivers. The observed correlations likely result from the chemicals and resistance genes arising from the same source, and differences in fate and transport over larger scales lead to loss of this relationship.

Graphical abstract: Small and large-scale distribution of four classes of antibiotics in sediment: association with metals and antibiotic resistance genes

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Apr 2018
Accepted
13 Jul 2018
First published
16 Jul 2018

Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2018,20, 1167-1179

Small and large-scale distribution of four classes of antibiotics in sediment: association with metals and antibiotic resistance genes

J. F. Kerrigan, K. D. Sandberg, D. R. Engstrom, Timothy M. LaPara and W. A. Arnold, Environ. Sci.: Processes Impacts, 2018, 20, 1167 DOI: 10.1039/C8EM00190A

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