State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resources and Environment, School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150090, China; Department of Microbiology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14850, United States.
School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tongji University, 1239 Siping Road, Shanghai 200092, China.
Environ Pollut. 2020 Jan;256:113392. doi: 10.1016/j.envpol.2019.113392. Epub 2019 Oct 15.
Lincomycin mycelial residues (LMRs) are one kind of byproduct of the pharmaceutical industry. Hydrothermal treatment has been used to dispose of them and land application is an attractive way to reuse the treated LMRs. However, the safe dose for soil amendment remains unclear. In this study, a lab-scale incubation experiment was conducted to investigate the influence of the amendment dosage on lincomycin resistance genes and soil bacterial communities via quantitative PCR and 16S rRNA sequencing. The results showed that introduced lincomycin degraded quickly in soil and became undetectable after 50 days. Degradation rate of the high amendment amount (100 mg kg) was almost 4 times faster than that of low amendment amount (10 mg kg). Moreover, the introduced LMRs induced the increase of lincomycin resistance genes after incubation for 8 days, and two genes (lmrA and lnuB) showed a dosage-related increase. For example, the abundance of gene lmrA was 17.78, 74.13 and 128.82 copies g soil for lincomycin concentration of 10, 50 and 100 mg kg, respectively. However, the abundance of lincomycin resistance genes recovered to the control level as the incubation period extended to 50 days, indicating a low persistence in soil. In addition, LMRs application markedly shifted the bacterial composition and significant difference was found between control soil, 10 mg kg and 50 mg kg lincomycin amended soil. Actually, several genera bacteria were significantly related to the elevation of lincomycin resistance genes. These results provided a comprehensive understanding of the effects of lincomycin dosage on the fate of resistance genes and microbial communities in LMRs applied soil.
林可霉素菌丝体残留(LMRs)是制药工业的一种副产物。水热处理已被用于处理它们,土地应用是一种有吸引力的再利用处理后的 LMRs 的方法。然而,土壤改良的安全剂量尚不清楚。在这项研究中,通过定量 PCR 和 16S rRNA 测序,进行了一个实验室规模的培养实验,以研究添加量对林可霉素抗性基因和土壤细菌群落的影响。结果表明,引入的林可霉素在土壤中降解迅速,50 天后无法检测到。高添加量(100mgkg)的降解速度几乎是低添加量(10mgkg)的 4 倍。此外,引入的 LMRs 在培养 8 天后诱导了林可霉素抗性基因的增加,并且两个基因(lmrA 和 lnuB)表现出剂量相关的增加。例如,基因 lmrA 的丰度分别为 10、50 和 100mgkg 林可霉素浓度下的 17.78、74.13 和 128.82 拷贝 g 土壤。然而,随着培养时间延长至 50 天,林可霉素抗性基因的丰度恢复到对照水平,表明在土壤中持久性低。此外,LMRs 的应用显著改变了细菌组成,在对照土壤、10mgkg 和 50mgkg 林可霉素添加土壤之间发现了显著差异。实际上,一些细菌属与林可霉素抗性基因的升高显著相关。这些结果提供了对林可霉素剂量对 LMRs 应用土壤中抗性基因和微生物群落命运影响的全面理解。