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Ecotoxicology and Human Environmental Health
Antibiotic resistome alteration by different disinfection strategies in a fullscale drinking water treatment plant deciphered by metagenomic assembly Huaicheng Zhang, Fangyu Chang, PENG SHI, Lin Ye, Qing Zhou, Yang Pan, and Ai-Min Li Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b05907 • Publication Date (Web): 23 Jan 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 24, 2019
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Title: Antibiotic resistome alteration by different disinfection strategies in a full-scale
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drinking water treatment plant deciphered by metagenomic assembly
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Authors:
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Huaicheng Zhang, Fangyu Chang, Peng Shi,* Lin Ye, Qing Zhou, Yang Pan, Aimin Li
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Affiliations of authors:
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State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the
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Environment, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, China.
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*Corresponding
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Addresses:
author
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State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the
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Environment, Nanjing University, 163 Xianlin Avenue, Nanjing 210023, China.
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Phone: +86-25-89680507
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Fax: +86-25-89680507
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Email:
[email protected] 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
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Abstract
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Disinfection regimes are considered the most solid strategy to reduce microbial risks
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in drinking water, but their roles in shaping the antibiotic resistome are poorly
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understood. This study revealed the alteration of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs)
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profiles, their co-occurrence with mobile genetic elements (MGEs) and potential hosts
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during drinking water disinfection based on metagenomic assembly. We found the
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ozone/chlorine (O3/Cl2) coupled disinfection significantly increased the relative
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abundance of ARGs and MGE–carrying antibiotic resistance contigs (ARCs) through
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the enrichment of ARGs within the resistance–nodulation–cell division and
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ATP-binding cassette antibiotic efflux families that are primarily carried by
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Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Mycobacterium and Methylocystis, whereas the
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antimicrobial resin/chlorine coupled disinfection posed unremarkable changes to the
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ARG and MGE abundances. Moreover, the co-occurrence patterns of antibiotic efflux
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and beta-lactam ARGs and MGEs were widely identified, ARCs carrying the recR
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and mexH genes were detected in all the samples, with the highest abundance of 2.25
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× 10-2 copies per cell after O3/Cl2 disinfection. Sequence-independent binning
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analysis successfully retrieved two draft ARG-carrying genomes of Acidovorax sp.
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MR-S7 and Hydrogenophaga sp. IBVHS2, further revealing the host-ARG
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relationship during O3/Cl2 disinfection. Overall, this study provides novel insights into
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the antibiotic resistome alteration during drinking water disinfection.
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Keywords: antibiotic resistance genes, mobile genetic elements, drinking water,
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disinfection strategy, high-throughput sequencing
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INTRODUCTION
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Antibiotic resistance has become a challenging problem in clinical medicine
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worldwide, whereas new antibiotic development and usage is always far behind the
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evolution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and the rapid spread of antibiotic
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resistance genes (ARGs).1 Drinking water has been regarded as an important medium
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to propagate ARB and ARGs between the environment and humans,2-4 demonstrating
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the necessity and urgency of blocking their transmission. Disinfection is the most
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solid barrier that provides reliable physico-chemical removal of microorganisms in
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drinking water.5 However, increasing work has recently documented the unintended
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effects of many disinfection approaches on the drinking water microbiome.6,7
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Disinfection processes for drinking water mainly include chlorination, ozonation,
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ultraviolet radiation, antimicrobial resin (AR) treatment and their combinations, and
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usually act as the last barrier for reducing potential pathogens in drinking water
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treatment plants (DWTPs). Among these disinfection treatment, chlorination is a
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widely used disinfection approach in DWTPs worldwide, but mounting evidence has
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demonstrated its enrichment effects on several types of ARGs among drinking water
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microbiomes.8-10 The safety of ultraviolet (UV) disinfection has been well
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acknowledged due to fewer disinfection byproducts,11 but there are still doubts about
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its bacterial inactivation capacity in drinking water.12 Several studies have suggested
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that to damage ARGs requires much greater UV doses than to inactivate ARB,13,14
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and total ARG abundances in wastewater were elevated after UV disinfection.15 To
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date, the fates of ARGs after UV disinfection are rarely reported in full-scale DWTPs.
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Moreover, previous studies also observed increased levels of some ARGs after ozone
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disinfection in DWTPs,16 and that higher doses of ozone required for ARG
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elimination.17 AR with quaternary ammonium salt moieties such as trimethylamine
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hydrochloride is able to interact with bacterial membranes through electrostatic
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attractions and then physically damages the bacterial morphology and thus induces
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cell death.18 However, its effects on the antibiotic resistome in drinking water have
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not yet been deeply explored. Overall, there is growing evidence to suggest that the
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antibiotic resistome alteration occurs and is closely associated with survival of
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bacteria during disinfection treatments,19,20 which this study further explores.
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Disinfectants often share the same mechanism of resistance with many
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antibiotics,21,22 and different ARGs within the same resistance mechanism may
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consistently respond to disinfection, so the dynamic variation of whole ARG
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responses to disinfection cannot be completely revealed if they are categorized
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according to antibiotic type. Furthermore, mobile genetic elements (MGEs) are
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hypothesized to play vital roles in shaping the antibiotic resistome during drinking
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water disinfection.23 Host and co-occurring MGEs have been proven to influence the
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antibiotic resistome,24 and this probably results in different fates of the same ARGs
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during drinking water disinfection. Moreover, Resfams has been specifically
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developed for ARG identification according to antibiotic resistance mechanism and
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ontology, which can provide higher annotation sensitivity and resolution than
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previous ARG databases.25 Metagenomic assembly combined with Resfams
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annotation has the advantage of improving the annotation accuracy of ARGs, the
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resolution of host identification and the determination of ARG co-occurrence, which
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have been successfully applied in antibiotic resistome analysis of the gut microbes,26
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animal manure27 and sediment.28
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In the present study, we selected a steady-operation DWTP that simultaneously
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operates disinfection units of chlorine, ozone, UV and AR in order to investigate the
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antibiotic resistome alteration under different disinfection strategies. Metagenomic
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assembly and Resfams annotation were jointly utilized to uncover the co-occurrence
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patterns of ARGs and MGEs, as well as their bacterial hosts. To our knowledge, this
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study is the first to comprehensively explore the effects of multiple disinfection
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strategies on the antibiotic resistome in a full-scale DWTP based on same source
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water and may provide novel insights leading to the further reduction of human health
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risks induced by the antibiotic resistome in drinking water.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Sampling Locations in DWTP. The full-scale DWTP is located at Yancheng City,
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Jiangsu Province, China, which is simultaneously equipped with three sets of
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disinfection strategies. As shown in Figure S1, the first strategy includes ozone and
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chlorine (O3/Cl2) disinfection units, and another two strategies couple AR with
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chlorine (AR/Cl2) and UV (AR/UV) disinfection units. Specifically, the AR used in
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this study is a typical type of magnetic polymer with polyacrylic acid matrixes and
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quaternary ammonium salt groups, and its physiochemical parameters and application
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were reported in a previous study.29 In brief, the AR treatment in drinking water has
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realized engineering application in China and other countries. Detailed information
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and operational parameters of the DWTP are provided in Table S1. In detail, 800 L of
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source
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chlorine-disinfected water (O-CW), AR-disinfected water (ARW), AR coupled with
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chlorine-disinfected water (AR-CW) and AR coupled with UV-disinfected water
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(AR-UVW) were collected from the different disinfection strategies in August 2016
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according to our previously established method.8 Sampling campaigns were
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performed in triplicate in each location using water filters and lasted for 24 h to
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control for the temporal variation of influent water. A total of 18 water filters were
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transported to the laboratory at 4 °C within 4 h for further experiments. The water
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quality of each sample is presented in Table S2, which were measured following the
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standard methods.30
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DNA Extraction and Illumina High-throughput Sequencing (HTS). Bacterial
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suspension of each water sample was isolated from the water filter according to our
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previous method,8 and then subjected to DNA extraction using the FastDNA SPIN Kit
water
(SW),
ozone-disinfected
water
(OW),
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ozone
coupled
with
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for Soil (MP Biomedicals, CA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The
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concentration and purity of DNA were quantified using microspectrophotometry
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(NanoDrop ND−2000, NanoDrop Technologies, Wilmington, DE), and the quality
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was determined by 1% agarose gel electrophoresis. The quantified DNA
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(approximately 6 μg) for each sample was subjected to the 350-bp library construction
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(Nextera DNA library Preparation Kit), and Illumina HTS with paired-end sequencing
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strategy (2 × 150 bp) was performed on an Illumina HiSeq 4000 platform (Illumina
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Inc., San Diego, CA) in the Novogene Sequencing Company (Beijing, China). The
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metagenomic data were deposited into the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) database of
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the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) under accession number
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SUB2036733. Low-quality reads were filtered to achieve better results in the
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downstream analysis by using Trimmomatic (Version 0.36) following a previous
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study.24 Finally, approximately 8.70−12.50 Gb high-quality paired-end reads were
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obtained for each sample with an average length of 150 bp (Table S3).
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Metagenomic Assembly and Gene Prediction. Clean reads of each sample were de
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novo assembled into contigs using the CLC Genomics Workbench (Version 9.0.1,
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CLC Bio., Aarhus, Denmark) with the k−mer size of 63.24 A total of 151,624–219,429
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contigs for each sample were generated with N50 values of 1,063–2,033 (Table S4),
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and then open reading frames (ORFs) on the assembled contigs of each sample were
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predicted using metagenome version of Prodigal (version 2.6.3). Finally, 271,619–
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410,328 ORFs were obtained for each sample (Table S4).
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ARGs and MGEs Identification and Quantification. The protein sequences of
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predicted ORFs were aligned against the Resfams core genes database
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(http://dantaslab.wustl.edu/resfams) using HMMSCAN (version 3.0) with the
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recommended parameters to identify the ARG-like ORFs,25 which are defined as the
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ARGs in this study. A contig was annotated as an antibiotic resistance contig (ARC)
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if at least one ARG was located on it. Then, the protein sequences of all ORFs on
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each ARC were searched against the nonredundant (NR) protein sequence database
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(retrieved on December, 2016) of NCBI using BLASTP with e-value cutoff ≤ 10-5.24
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One ORF was regarded as an MGE if one of the following keywords was in its best
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BLAST hit description: transposase, transposon, conjugative, conjugal, integrase,
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integron,
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co-occurrence of ARGs and MGEs was identified if they were both located on the
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same contig.
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plasmid,
recombinase,
or
mobilization.31,32
The
The abundance was defined as the copies of ARG/MGE/ARC per cell (hereafter abbreviated as cpc) and calculated by the following equation:33 𝑛
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recombination
Abundance =
∑ 𝑖=1
𝑁𝑖mapped reads × 𝐿𝑖read/𝐿𝑖ORF 𝑁16S sequence × 𝐿𝑖read/𝐿16S sequence
× 𝑁16𝑆 𝑐𝑜𝑝𝑦 𝑛𝑢𝑚𝑏𝑒𝑟
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where n is the number of ARG- or MGE-like ORFs or ARCs belonging to the same
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category; Nimapped reads is the number of reads mapped to ARG- or MGE-like ORFs or
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ARCs; 𝐿𝑖ORF is the sequence length of the corresponding target ARG- or MGE-like
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ORF or ARC sequences; Nimapped
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Genomics Workbench; 𝐿𝑖read is the read length (150 bp); 𝑁16S sequence is the total
reads
and 𝐿𝑖ORF are both calculated by the CLC
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number of the 16S rRNA sequences in each metagenomic dataset compared to the
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Greengenes database;34 L16S sequence is 1432 bp in this study and stands for the average
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length of 16S rRNA gene in Greengenes;35 N16S copy number is the average copy number
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of 16S rRNA genes per cell number in each metagenomic dataset, which is calculated
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by DIAMOND (v1.09) with 30 sets of universal essential single copy marker genes
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according to a previous study.33 Moreover, the abundance of each ARG category was
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the sum of the ARG abundance within the same resistance mechanism. The
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percentage (%) of each ARG/MGE/ARC category was calculated as the ratio of the
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abundance of the target ARG/MGE/ARC family in the total ARG/MGE/ARC
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abundance in each sample. Core ARGs are defined as being detected with the
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percentage of over 20% in all the samples.
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Taxonomic Classification of the Bacterial Hosts of Core ARGs. To identify
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potential hosts of ARGs, all the ORFs on each ARC were compared against the NCBI
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NR database using BLASTP with e-value cutoff ≤ 10−5.24 The output results of the
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BLASTP comparison were comprehensively parsed and taxonomically classified
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using MEGAN (Version 6, MEtaGenome Analyzer).24 The potential host of an ARC
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was confirmed based on a majority vote method meaning that if more than half of the
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ORFs on each ARC were assigned to the same taxonomy rank (the genus level), then
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the ARC was assigned to that taxon.36
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Sequence-independent
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composition-independent genome binning was performed to explore the fate and
Binning
of
Metagenome.
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Sequence
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distribution of ARGs and to retrieve genomes carrying ARGs from samples in the
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O3/Cl2 disinfection strategy. Thus, the trimmed reads from paired samples (SW/OW
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and OW/O-CW) were merged to form new datasets for metagenomic assembly, and
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then ORF prediction and antibiotic resistance annotation of the coassembled contigs
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were performed as described above. Next, two coverage values were obtained by
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mapping the trimmed reads from each paired sample to the coassembled contigs by
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using CLC Genomics Workbench and plotting against each other using R.37 The
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contigs were assigned to different colors based on taxonomic classification and
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guanine-cytosine (GC) content. The draft genomes were retrieved by using
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differential coverage binning of multiple metagenomes recommended by Albertsen et
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al. (2013),37 and the quality of the genome bins (completeness and potential
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contamination level) was determined by searching a set of 107 HMMs of essential
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single-copy genes, which represented 107 proteins conserved in 95% of all sequenced
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bacteria,38 against the predicted ORFs using HMMER3.37
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Statistical Analysis. The ARG/MGE/ARC abundance was expressed as the mean ±
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standard deviation, and statistical significance between different groups was assessed
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by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Tukey post hoc tests using IBM
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SPSS Statistics 22.0 (IBM Inc., USA) with a significance cutoff of 0.05. To evaluate
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the significant difference in the antibiotic resistomes of different samples, principal
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coordinate analysis (PCoA) and Adonis test were simultaneously conducted based on
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the Bray−Curtis distance of ARG abundances by R software (version 3.3.2) with the
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Vegan package. Additionally, cluster analysis using UPGMA algorithm based on
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Bray–Curtis similarity index was also performed to group samples with different
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co-occurrence patterns of ARGs and MGEs using PAST (PAleontological STatistics)
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software (University of Oslo, Norway).
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RESULTS
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Antibiotic Resistome Characterization and Alteration. In this study, 0.04–0.06%
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of the total predicted ORFs were identified as ARGs, and 0.08–0.12% of the total
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contigs were considered ARCs in different samples (Figure S2). In total, 0.65–1.25
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cpc ARGs belonging to the resistance–nodulation–cell division (RND) antibiotic
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efflux, ATP–binding cassette (ABC) antibiotic efflux, major facilitator superfamily
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(MFS) antibiotic efflux, beta-lactamase, antibiotic inactivation, phosphotransferase,
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acetyltransferase,
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modulating resistance families were detected in all the drinking water samples (Figure
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1). In detail, ARGs within RND, ABC and MFS antibiotic efflux families are
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affiliated to the major function of antibiotic efflux; ARGs within beta-lactamase and
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antibiotic inactivation families belong to the functional group of antibiotic
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degradation; the major function of antibiotic modification contains ARGs within
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phosphotransferase, acetyltransferase, nucleotidyltransferase families; ARGs within
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rRNA methyltransferase and gene modulating resistance families pertain to function
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of target protection and others, respectively (Figure 1). Notably, the abundance of
nucleotidyltransferase,
rRNA
methyltransferase
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ARGs within the RND and ABC antibiotic efflux and beta-lactamase families
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accounted for 85.34–95.54% of the abundance of total ARGs (Figure S3), and these
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were the dominant ARGs in all of the samples and were identified as the core
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antibiotic resistome in this study. Moreover, 2.45–6.08% of the total identified ARCs
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were found to carry multiple ARGs (≥ 2 ARGs) (Figure S4A), and 86.07–93.93% of
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the ARCs carried ARGs within the RND, ABC antibiotic efflux and beta-lactamase
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families in different samples (Figure S4B).
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The relative abundance of total ARGs was remarkably increased from 0.82 ± 0.05
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cpc in the SW sample to 1.24 ± 0.04 cpc after ozone disinfection (p < 0.05), and
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further increased to 1.25 ± 0.08 cpc after the subsequent chlorination (Figure 1). In
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detail, ozone disinfection mainly increased the abundances of RND antibiotic efflux,
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ABC antibiotic efflux and beta-lactam ARGs (p < 0.05), but the following
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chlorination decreased the abundance of beta-lactam ARGs (p < 0.05) (Figure 1).
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However, the relative abundance of total ARGs was significantly reduced to 0.65 ±
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0.01 cpc after AR disinfection mainly through the reduction of the RND antibiotic
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efflux ARGs (p < 0.05) (Figure 1). The subsequent chlorination showed no significant
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effect on the relative abundance of total ARGs but remarkably increased the
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abundance of RND antibiotic efflux ARGs from 0.13 ± 0.01 cpc in the ARW sample
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to 0.26 ± 0.01 cpc in the AR-CW sample (p < 0.05) (Figure 1). Conversely, the
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alternative UV disinfection after AR treatment significantly enhanced the relative
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abundance of total ARGs (1.01 ± 0.17 cpc), and the abundances of all detected types
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of ARGs except for those in the MFS antibiotic efflux, antibiotic inactivation and
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rRNA methyltransferase families (p < 0.05) (Figure 1). Compared to the SW, the
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relative abundances of total ARGs in the final effluents were significantly increased
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after the O3/Cl2 and AR/UV coupling disinfection strategies, respectively (p < 0.05)
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(Figure 1). However, no significant change in the relative abundance of total ARGs
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was observed after the AR/Cl2 coupling disinfection (Figure 1). PCoA based on the
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Bray–Curtis distance showed the significant shift of antibiotic resistome after
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different drinking water disinfection strategies (Figure S5, Adonis test, R2 = 0.91, p