Fate of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes in a full-scale restaurant food waste treatment plant:Implications of the roles beyond heavy metals and mobile genetic elements

被引:9
|
作者
Pinjing He [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Zhuofeng Yu [1 ,4 ]
Liming Shao [2 ,3 ]
Yizhou Zhou [1 ,4 ]
Fan Lü [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, Tongji University
[2] Institute of Waste Treatment and Reclamation, Tongji University
[3] Centre for the Technology Research and Training on Household Waste in Small Towns & Rural Area, Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development of PR China (MOHURD)
[4] Shanghai Institute of Pollution Control and Ecological Security
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Food waste; Biological treatment; Anaerobic digestion; Antibiotics; Antibiotic resistance genes; Material flow analysis;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X799.3 [生活];
学科分类号
083002 ;
摘要
Is our food safe and free of the crisis of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance(AR)?And will the derived food waste(FW) impose AR risk to the environment after biological treatment? This study used restaurant FW leachates flowing through a 200 tons-waste/day biological treatment plant as a window to investigate the fate of antibiotics and antibiotic-resistance genes(ARGs) during the acceptance and treatment of FW. Sulfonamides(sulfamethazine, sulfamethoxazole) and quinolones(ciprofloxacin, enrofloxacin, ofloxacin) were detected during FW treatment, while tetracyclines, macrolides and chloramphenicols were not observable. ARGs encoding resistance to sulfonamides, tetracyclines and macrolides emerged in FW leachates.Material flow analysis illustrated that the total amount of antibiotics(except sulfamethazine) and ARGs were constant during FW treatment processes. Both the concentration and total amount of most antibiotics and ARGs fluctuated during treatment, physical processes(screening, centrifugation, solid–liquid and oil–water separation) did not decrease antibiotic or ARGs concentrations or total levels permanently; the affiliated wastewater treatment plant appeared to remove sulfonamides and most ARGs concentrations and total amount. Heavy metals Ni,Co and Cu were important for disseminating antibiotics concentrations and MGEs for distributing ARGs concentrations. Humic substances(fulvic acids, hydrophilic fractions), C-associated and N-associated contents were essential for the distribution of the total amounts of antibiotics and ARGs. Overall, this study implied that human food might not be free of antibiotics and ARGs, and FW was an underestimated AR pool with various determinants. Nonetheless, derived hazards of FW could be mitigated through biological treatment with well-planned daily operations.
引用
收藏
页码:17 / 34
页数:18
相关论文
共 38 条
  • [31] Metagenomic profiling of antibiotic resistance genes and their associations with bacterial community during multiple disinfection regimes in a full-scale drinking water treatment plant
    Jia, Shuyu
    Bian, Kaiqin
    Shi, Peng
    Ye, Lin
    Liu, Chang-Hong
    WATER RESEARCH, 2020, 176
  • [32] Mobile genetic elements in potential host microorganisms are the key hindrance for the removal of antibiotic resistance genes in industrial-scale composting with municipal solid waste
    Tang, Zhurui
    Xi, Beidou
    Huang, Caihong
    Tan, Wenbing
    Li, Wenxuan
    Zhao, Xinyu
    Liu, Kexin
    Xia, Xiangqin
    BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY, 2020, 301 (301)
  • [33] Responses of antibiotics, antibiotic resistance genes, and mobile genetic elements in sewage sludge to thermal hydrolysis pre-treatment and various anaerobic digestion conditions
    Sun, Chenxiang
    Li, Wei
    Chen, Zhan
    Qin, Wentao
    Wen, Xianghua
    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL, 2019, 133
  • [34] Seasonal variation of antibiotic resistance genes in activated sludge of a full-scale municipal wastewater treatment plant: Contribution of activated sludge functional taxa and clinically relevant taxa
    Guruge, Shashika Kumudumali
    Han, Ziming
    Dai, Shiting
    Islam, Ashraful
    Ben, Weiwei
    Tian, Zhe
    Zhang, Yu
    Yang, Min
    WATER RESEARCH, 2025, 268
  • [35] Full-scale mesophilic biogas plants using manure as C-source: bacterial community shifts along the process cause changes in the abundance of resistance genes and mobile genetic elements
    Wolters, Birgit
    Ding, Guo-Chun
    Kreuzig, Robert
    Smalla, Kornelia
    FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, 2016, 92 (02) : 1 - 17
  • [36] Biosolids for safe land application: does wastewater treatment plant size matters when considering antibiotics, pollutants, microbiome, mobile genetic elements and associated resistance genes?
    Wolters, Birgit
    Hauschild, Kristin
    Blau, Khald
    Mulder, Ines
    Heyde, Benjamin Justus
    Sorensen, Soren J.
    Siemens, Jan
    Jechalke, Sven
    Smalla, Kornelia
    Nesme, Joseph
    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2022, 24 (03) : 1573 - 1589
  • [37] Unveiling the characteristics of free-living and particle-associated antibiotic resistance genes associated with bacterial communities along different processes in a full-scale drinking water treatment plant
    Li, Na
    Fan, Xiao-Yan
    Li, Xing
    JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2024, 476
  • [38] Corrigendum to Comparing the fate of antibiotic resistance genes in two full-scale thermophilic anaerobic digestion plants treating food wastewater [Bioresour. Technol. 312 (2020) 123577] (Bioresource Technology (2020) 312, (S096085242030849X), (10.1016/j.biortech.2020.123577))
    Jang, Hyun Min
    Lee, Jangwoo
    Shin, Seung Gu
    Shin, Jingyeong
    Kim, Young Mo
    Bioresource Technology, 2020, 317