Department of Biological Systems Engineering, Virginia Tech, 155 Ag. Quad Lane, Seitz Hall RM 200, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Department of Biological Systems Engineering, Virginia Tech, 155 Ag. Quad Lane, Seitz Hall RM 200, Blacksburg, VA, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2021 Apr 20;766:144321. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144321. Epub 2020 Dec 25.
Agricultural soils are often amended with livestock manure, making them a key reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Given that soils are among the most microbially-diverse environments on the planet; effective characterization and quantification of the effects of manure-derived amendments on soil resistomes is a major challenge. This study examined the effects of dairy manure-derived amendments on agricultural soils via two strategies: quantification of anthropogenic ARG markers via qPCR and shotgun metagenomic resistome profiling; and these strategies were compared to a previously published antibiotic resistant fecal coliform dataset. Soil samples were collected throughout a 120 day complete block field experiment to compare the effects of amendment type on antibiotic resistance. Results of all three measurements were consistent with the hypothesis that the application of composted manure reduced antibiotic resistance in soil relative to the application of raw manure, although some differences were noted in comparing the patterns of the three measurements with time. Raw dairy manure-amended soils yielded high sul1 and tet(W) relative abundances on Day 0 (following amendment application), but significantly decreased to background levels by Day 67 (harvest) and Day 120 (study completion). Shotgun metagenomics similarly detected a decrease in the relative abundances of sulfonamide and tetracycline-associated ARGs over time in the raw manure- and compost-amended soils; however, these levels were significantly lower than those estimated by qPCR. Interestingly, although patterns of sulfonamide and tetracycline resistance among culturable fecal coliforms echoed those observed via qPCR and metagenomics; erythromycin resistant coliforms were directly recovered by culture in amended soils, but corresponding ARGs were not detected by qPCR or metagenomics. This study supports both composting and time restrictions as means of reducing the potential for antibiotic resistance in manure to spread via soil application. Results suggest some differences in finer conclusions drawn depending on which antibiotic resistance monitoring target is selected.
农业土壤通常会添加牲畜粪便来进行改良,这使得它们成为抗生素抗性基因(ARGs)的主要储存库。鉴于土壤是地球上微生物多样性最丰富的环境之一;有效表征和量化源自粪便的改良剂对土壤抗药性的影响是一个主要挑战。本研究通过两种策略研究了奶牛粪便衍生的改良剂对农业土壤的影响:通过 qPCR 定量测定人为 ARG 标记物和 shotgun 宏基因组抗药性分析;并将这两种策略与之前发表的抗生素抗性粪便大肠菌群数据集进行了比较。在为期 120 天的完整田间试验中收集土壤样本,以比较不同改良剂类型对土壤抗药性的影响。所有三种测量结果都与假设一致,即与施用生粪相比,施用堆肥粪可以降低土壤中的抗生素抗性,尽管在比较三种测量方法随时间的模式时,也注意到了一些差异。生奶牛粪肥处理的土壤在添加后第 0 天(添加后),sul1 和 tet(W) 的相对丰度较高,但在第 67 天(收获)和第 120 天(研究完成)降至背景水平。shotgun 宏基因组学也检测到生粪肥和堆肥肥处理土壤中磺胺类和四环素相关 ARG 的相对丰度随时间逐渐降低;然而,这些水平明显低于 qPCR 估计的值。有趣的是,尽管可培养粪便大肠菌群中磺胺类和四环素抗性的模式与通过 qPCR 和宏基因组学观察到的模式一致;但在添加土壤中,通过培养直接回收了红霉素抗性大肠菌群,但通过 qPCR 或宏基因组学未检测到相应的 ARGs。本研究支持堆肥和时间限制作为减少通过土壤应用传播的粪便中抗生素抗性的潜在风险的方法。研究结果表明,根据选择的抗生素抗性监测目标,在更精细的结论方面存在一些差异。