Dynamics of Antibiotic Resistance Markers and Escherichia Coli Invasion in River Biofilms Facing Increasing Heat and Flow Stagnation

29 Pages Posted: 26 Mar 2023

See all articles by Dr. Giulia Gionchetta

Dr. Giulia Gionchetta

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

Delaney Snead

Virginia Tech - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Simone Semerad

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

Karin Beck

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

Amy Pruden

Virginia Tech - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Helmut Buergmann

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

Abstract

As motivation to address environmental dissemination of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is mounting, there is a need to characterize mechanisms by which AMR can propagate under environmental conditions. Here we investigated the effect of temperature and stagnation on the persistence of wastewater-associated antibiotic resistance markers in riverine biofilms and the invasion success of genetically-tagged Escherichia coli. Biofilms grown on glass slides incubated in-situ downstream of a wastewater treatment plant effluent discharge point were transferred to laboratory-scale flumes fed with filtered river water under potentially stressful temperature and flow conditions: recirculation flow at 20°C, stagnation at 20°C, and stagnation at 30°C. After 14 days, quantitative PCR and amplicon sequencing were used to quantify bacteria, biofilms diversity, resistance markers (sul1, sul2, ermB, tetW, tetM, tetB, blaCTX-M-1, intl1) and E. coli. Resistance markers significantly decreased over time regardless of the treatment applied. Although invading E. coli were initially able to colonize the biofilms, its abundance subsequently declined. Stagnation was associated with a shift in biofilm taxonomic composition, but there was no apparent effect of flow conditions or the simulated river-pool warming (30°C) on AMR persistence or invasion success of E. coli. Results however indicated that antibiotic resistance markers in the riverine biofilms decreased under the experimental conditions in the absence of exposure to external inputs of antibiotics and AMR.

Keywords: wastewater, microbial invasion, antimicrobial resistance, river biofilm, environmental stressors, sequencing

Suggested Citation

Gionchetta, Dr. Giulia and Snead, Delaney and Semerad, Simone and Beck, Karin and Pruden, Amy and Buergmann, Helmut, Dynamics of Antibiotic Resistance Markers and Escherichia Coli Invasion in River Biofilms Facing Increasing Heat and Flow Stagnation. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4394291 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4394291

Dr. Giulia Gionchetta

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology ( email )

Delaney Snead

Virginia Tech - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Simone Semerad

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology ( email )

Karin Beck

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology ( email )

Amy Pruden

Virginia Tech - Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering ( email )

Helmut Buergmann (Contact Author)

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology ( email )

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