Subscriber access provided by CMU Libraries - http://library.cmich.edu
Article
Prevalence of antibiotic resistance genes and bacterial pathogens in longterm manured greenhouse soils as revealed by metagenomic survey Hua Fang, Huifang Wang, Lin Cai, and Yunlong Yu Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/es504157v • Publication Date (Web): 16 Dec 2014 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 24, 2014
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Prevalence of antibiotic resistance genes and bacterial pathogens in long-term manured
2
greenhouse soils as revealed by metagenomic survey
3 4
Hua Fang,† Huifang Wang,† Lin Cai,‡ and YunlongYu*,†
5 6
†
7 8 9 10
Institute of Pesticide and Environmental Toxicology, College of Agriculture & Biotechnology, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China
‡
Division of Life Science, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong, China
*Correspondence author, Tel/Fax: +86-571-88982433, Email:
[email protected] 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 1
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
23
TOC/Abstract Art:
24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 2
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 33
Page 3 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
37
ABSTRACT: Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), human pathogenic bacteria (HPB), and
38
HPB carrying ARGs pose a high risk to soil ecology and public health. Here, we used
39
metagenomic approach to investigate their diversity and abundance in chicken manures and
40
greenhouse soils collected from Guli, Pulangke, and Hushu vegetable bases with different
41
greenhouse planting years in Nanjing, Eastern China. There was a positive correlation
42
between the levels of antibiotics, ARGs, HPB, and HPB carrying ARGs in manures and
43
greenhouse soils. In total, 156.2-5001.4 µg/kg of antibiotic residues, 22 classes of ARGs, 32
44
HPB species, and 46 species of HPB carrying ARGs were found. The highest relative
45
abundance was tetracycline resistance genes (manures) and multidrug resistance genes
46
(greenhouse soils). The dominant HPB and HPB carrying ARGs in the manures were Bacillus
47
anthracis and Bordetella pertussis, and B. anthracis (sulfonamide resistance gene, sul1),
48
respectively. The corresponding findings in greenhouse soils were Mycobacterium
49
tuberculosis and M. ulcerans, M. tuberculosis (macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin
50
resistance protein, MLSRP), and B. anthracis (sul1), respectively. Our findings confirmed
51
high levels of antibiotics, ARGs, HPB, and HPB carrying ARGs in the manured greenhouse
52
soils compared with those in the field soils, and their relative abundance increased with the
53
extension of greenhouse planting years.
54 55 56 57 58 3
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
59
Page 4 of 33
INTRODUCTION
60
Antibiotics have been widely used in China since the early 1990s as food additives at
61
sub-therapeutic doses in livestock and poultry breeding to prevent diseases in animals and
62
improve production performance.1 Approximately 30-90% of the antibiotics fed to animals
63
can be excreted by feces or urine as parent compounds or metabolites. Subsequently, these
64
residual antibiotics can enter the soil environment following the land application of animal
65
wastes at the level of 15,000-150,000 kg/ha per year in the cultivation of greenhouse
66
vegetables in China, which accounts for 85% of global total greenhouse cultivation area.2-5
67
Antibiotic residues in greenhouse soils are usually low (i.e., µg/kg to mg/kg) because of their
68
adsorption, biodegradation, photolysis, and transport.6 However, repeated applications of
69
manure can still result in their "persistent" pollution.3
70
Manure carries antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and incorporates antibiotic residues
71
into soils, and these residues even at low concentraions exerts a selective pressure on the
72
microbial community and induces the emergence of diverse ARGs or multidrug resistance
73
(MDR) genes.4,7 The occurrence of E. coli carrying aadA and tetB was significantly more
74
frequent in the manued soil samples compared with swine manure.8 The abundance of
75
sulfonamide
76
sulfonamide-contaminated pig manure in arable soils.9 In addition, Zhu et al.10 reported that
77
the abundance of the top 63 ARGs subtypes of the detected 149 ARGs increased 192-28,000
78
folds in swine manures compared with antibiotic-free swine manures and control soils.
ARGs
clearly
increased
due
to
repeated
applications
of
79
ARGs are readily captured by human pathogenic bacteria (HPB) to form Superbugs such
80
as Salmonella, Bacteroidales, Campylobacter, Shigella, and E. coli O157:H7.11-13 Micallef et 4
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 5 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
81
al.14 found that eight Enterococcus species with resistance to ciprofloxacin, rifampicin, and
82
levofloxacin were the prevalent opportunistic pathogens in tomato farm soil from the
83
Mid-Atlantic United States. Yang et al.15 reported that the Bacteroidales bacteria Myroides
84
ordoratimimus (antibiotic resistant bacteria) and Sphingobacterium spp. (MDR bacteria) were
85
related to human clinical opportunistic pathogens in chicken manure. These HPB confer
86
antibiotic resistance and pathogenicity and easily infect humans by contact or via the
87
consumption of raw vegetables (e.g., radishes, tomatoes, strawberries, raspberries, lettuce),16
88
which in turn poses a serious threat to public health.17 Although the diversity and abundance
89
of ARGs in manures and farm soils have been investigated in several studies,10,18 little is
90
known about the diversity and abundance of ARGs, HPB, and especially HPB carrying ARGs
91
in greenhouse soils following long-term applications of manure.
92
The present study examines the diversity and abundance of ARGs, HPB, and HPB
93
carrying ARGs in manure-amended greenhouse soils from different planting years by
94
metagenomic analysis using an Illumina high-throughput shotgun sequencing technique. The
95
objectives of this study were: 1) to determine the residual amounts of different classes of
96
antibiotics; 2) to detect the diversity and abundance of ARGs, HPB, and HPB carrying ARGs;
97
3) to reveal the correlations between antibiotic residues, ARGs, HPB, HPB carrying ARGs,
98
and greenhouse planting years. These findings will contribute to a more comprehensive and
99
accurate evaluation of the ecological risks associated with manure application in greenhouse
100
soil environment.
101 102 5
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
103
MATERIALS AND METHODS
104
Chemicals
105
Technical grade antibiotics were purchased form Dr. Ehrenstorfer (Augsburg, Germany)
106
and included: tetracycline (97.0%, TC), oxytetracycline (96.5%, OTC), chloroteracycline
107
(92.5%, CTC), sulfadiazine (99.0%, SDZ), sulfadimidine (99.0%, SDD), sulfamethoxazole
108
(99.0%, SMX), lincomycin (98.0%, LCC), norfloxacin (99.5%, NOR), ciprofloxacin (95.0%,
109
CIP), enrofloxacin (98.5%, ENR), and chloramphenicol (98.5%, CPC). These antibiotics are
110
divided into five classes: tetracyclines (TC, OTC, and CTC), sulfonamides (SDZ, SDD, and
111
SMX), fluoroquinolones (NFC, OTC, and CTC), lincosamides (LCC), and chloramphenicols
112
(CPC). Analytical grade and chromatographic grade methanol and acetonitrile were purchased
113
from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany).
114 115
Manure and Soil Sampling
116
Chicken manure samples and corresponding manure-amended greenhouse soil samples
117
(0-15 cm) were collected from three representative vegetable cultivation bases in the Guli
118
(GL), Pulangke (PLK), and Hushu (HS), located in Nanjing suburbs in Eastern China. The
119
three chicken manures originated mainly from three local chicken farms in the surrounding
120
counties and were used as organic fertilizer. Field soil samples (0-15 cm) were collected from
121
a vegetable field adjacent to the greenhouse and used as the controls (no history of manure
122
application). Soil collected from five sampling sites within each vegetable greenhouse and
123
was thoroughly mixed to obtain a composite sample. Detailed information on the three
124
representative vegetable cultivation bases and three chicken manures is summarized in Table 6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 33
Page 7 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
125
S1 and S2. Leaf vegetables (Chinese cabbage, pakchoi, bokchoi, spinach, and lettuce) and
126
fruit vegetables (cucumber and tomato) were cultivated in these bases for 4-12 years. Three
127
chicken manure samples and seven soil samples were designated as follows: GL chicken
128
manure (GL-M), PLK chicken manure (PLK-M), and HS chicken manure (HS-M), GL
129
greenhouse soil for 4 years (GL-G4), GL field soil for 4 years (GL-F4), PLK greenhouse soil
130
for 12 years (PLK-G12), PLK greenhouse for 6 years followed by an uncovered shed for 6
131
years (PLK-G6/F6), HS greenhouse soil for 4 years (HS-G4), and HS field soil for 4 years
132
(HS-F4). The physicochemical properties of the manures and soils are summarized in Table
133
S3. All samples were individually transferred into a plastic bag and transported immediately
134
to the laboratory within 2 h. Subsequently, each sample was sieved (2 mm) to remove stones
135
and debris and was stored at -20 oC until further analysis. Each treatment was replicated three
136
times for the determination of antibiotic residues.
137 138
Extraction and Determination of Antibiotics
139
The residues of the 11 antibiotics in the manures and soils were extracted from the
140
chicken manure and soil samples following the method described by Fang et al.19 and
141
quantified according to the method described by Ho et al.20 using an ultra performance liquid
142
chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS, Waters, USA). The analytical
143
conditions, limit of detection (LOD) and limit of quantitation (LOQ) of the 11 antibiotics are
144
summarized in Table S4. To evaluate the effectiveness of the antibiotic extraction method, a
145
recovery experiment was conducted. Three replicated standard concentrations (0.1, 1, and 10
146
mg/kg) of the 11 antibiotics were mixed together with 2 g (dry weight equivalent) of either 7
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
147
manure or soil samples and processed as described above.
148 149
DNA Extraction and Sequencing
150
Total DNA was extracted from 1.0 g of each manure or soil sample using a FastDNA
151
SPIN Kit for Soil (MP Biomedicals, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
152
The DNA extracted from three technical replicates of each sample was pooled into one DNA
153
sample to minimize any potential DNA extraction bias. The concentration and quality of the
154
extracted DNA were determined using spectrophotometry (NanoDrop ND-1000, Wilmington,
155
DE). Prepared DNA samples were sent to Novegene (Beijing, China), and approximately 5 μg
156
of the each DNA samples was used for shotgun library construction. Subsequently, Illumina
157
high-throughput sequencing was performed with the HiSeq 2000 platform using a
158
PE101+8+101 cycle (Paired-end sequencing, 101-bp reads and 8-bp index sequence)
159
sequencing strategy. Approximately 5 Gb of metagenomic data were generated for each DNA
160
sample. Each manure and soil sample was sequenced for three technical replicates.
161 162
Quality Filtering
163
The metagenomic datasets were filtered using a self-written script to remove the reads
164
containing three or more ambiguous nucleotides and those with a length less than 100 bp.
165
Next, the 100 bp paired-end raw reads were paired-merged using a self-written script to
166
screen for 10-50 bp overlap paired-end reads and to assemble them into 150-190 bp iTags
167
(Illumina tags). Finally, the number of iTags was normalized to 10,000,000 in each
168
metagenomic dataset using a self-written script for downstream bioinformatic analysis. The 8
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 33
Page 9 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
169
obtained clean iTag datasets for all samples were uploaded to the MG-RAST server
170
(http://metagenomics.anl.gov/, MG-RAST IDs are summarized in Table S5).
171 172 173 174 175
Bioinformatic Analysis A detailed flowchart for data analysis is shown in Figure 1. Four bioinformatic analyses were conducted in this study: (i) ARGs
A widely accepted ARGs database was downloaded from the Antibiotic
176
Resistance Database (ARDB, http://ardb.cbcb.umd.edu/).21 The redundant sequences from the
177
downloaded database were removed using a self-written script. The resulting database
178
retained 2998 non-redundant sequences of 7797 original sequences from the ARDB. A total of
179
22 sub-databases were established for the ARG subtypes (Table S6). The metagenomic iTags
180
from each sample were searched against the non-redundant ARDB using BLASTX with an
181
E-value < 1e-5. An iTag sequence was annotated as an ARG-like sequence if its best hit in the
182
non-redundant ARDB had ≥90% amino acid identity and an alignment length ≥ 25 amino
183
acids (75 bp).
184
(ii) 16S rRNA gene (16S)
The Greengenes 16S database (version 2013) was
185
downloaded directly from the Greengenes website (http://greengenes.lbl.gov/).22 The
186
metagenomic iTags from each sample were searched against the Greengenes 16S database
187
using BLASTN with an E-value < 1e-20. The Greengenes 16S hit iTags were extracted from
188
the metagenomic iTags datasets.
189
(iii) HPB An HPB 16S database was constructed based on the taxonomic list derived
190
from the HPB virulence factor database (http://www.mgc.ac.cn/VFs/)23 and other 9
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 10 of 33
191
references.24,25 All of the selected HPB 16S are publicly available from the NCBI GenBank
192
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/) because their complete genomes have already been sequenced.
193
As shown in Table S7, a total of 708 16S sequences were retrieved and assigned to 61 human
194
pathogenic bacterial species. The 16S iTags from each sample were searched against the HPB
195
16S database using BLASTN with an E-value < 1e-20. The BLAST hit outputs were further
196
filtered to annotate the HPB using the strict criteria of amino acid identity ≥ 99%, alignment
197
length ≥ 150 bp, and mismatch ≤ 1 bp.
198
(iv) HPB carrying ARGs
To reveal the diversity and abundance of HPB carrying ARGs,
199
the genome sequences of the BLAST hit HPB were directly downloaded from the NCBI
200
GenBank, and then searched against the above ARG-like sequences for each sample. The
201
BLAST hit outputs were further filtered to annotate the HPB carrying ARGs using strict
202
criteria with amino acid identity ≥ 90% and alignment length ≥ 25 amino acids.
203 204
Statistical Analysis
205
Univariate analysis of covariance was conducted between antibiotic residues, ARGs, HPB,
206
and HPB carrying ARGs in manures and soils using SPSS 19.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL,
207
USA). The averages and standard deviations of all data were processed using Microsoft Excel
208
2007 (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA, USA). To distinguish the differences in
209
diversity and abundance of ARG subtypes, a heat map of each dominant ARG class was
210
visualized using Matlab 7.0 (The MathWorks, Natick, MA, USA).
211 212 10
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 11 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
213
RESULTS
214
Residual Levels of Antibiotics in the Manures and Soils
215
The recoveries of the 11 antibiotics at three concentrations of 0.1, 1.0, and 10.0 mg/kg
216
were 60.1-83.5% with relative standard deviations (RSDs) < 4.3% in the chicken manures,
217
and 62.3-91.1% with RSDs < 3.5% in the soils. The LOD and LOQ of the 11 antibiotics in all
218
samples were 0.1-5.0 µg/kg and 0.5-15.0 µg/kg, respectively (Table S4). These results indicate
219
that our extraction method was suitable for antibiotic residues analysis. As shown in Figure 2
220
and Table S8, the residual concentrations of the antibiotics, expressed as the sum of
221
tetracyclines, sulfonamides, fluoroquinolones, LCC, and CPC, were 2526.0, 5001.4, 4722.1
222
μg/kg in PLK-M, GL-M, HS-M, respectively, and 631.7, 156.2, 395.7, 384.1 μg/kg in
223
PLK-G12, PLK-G6/F6, GL-G4, HS-G4, respectively. However, antibiotic residues were
224
under the LOD in PLK-F12, GL-F4, and HS-F4. These results show that several classes of
225
antibiotic residues were present in the chicken manures and greenhouse soils. The residual
226
levels of antibiotics in the chicken manures were considerably higher than those found in the
227
greenhouse soils. Furthermore, the residual levels of tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones were
228
higher than those of other antibiotics in both the chicken manures and soils. In addition, the
229
individual antibiotic level in PLK-G6/F6 (cultivation in the greenhouse for 6 years and then
230
cultivation in an uncovered shed for 6 years) decreased to 11.6-64.5% of the antibiotic level in
231
PLK-G12 (cultivation in the greenhouse for 12 years), indicating that the uncovered shed
232
significantly decreased antibiotic residues in soils.
233
As shown Table S9, significant (P ≤ 0.01) positive correlations were observed in the
234
levels of antibiotics between the chicken manures and the greenhouse soils using univariate 11
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 12 of 33
235
analysis of covariance, e.g., PLK-M and PLK-G12 (R = 0.785), GL-M and GL-G4 (R =
236
0.771), and HS-M and HS-G4 (R = 0.794). A gradual accumulation of antibiotic residues in
237
the greenhouse soils was significantly and positively correlated (R = 0.680, P ≤ 0.05) with an
238
extension of the greenhouse planting years (Figure S1 and Table S12).
239 240
Diversity and Abundance of ARGs in the Manures and Soils
241
The relative abundance (i.e., the ARGs hit number divided by metagenomic iTags number
242
in each sample) of ARGs in each chicken manure and soil sample is shown in Figure 3a. The
243
relative abundance of ARGs varied from 0.01% to 0.23% in the chicken manures, 0.007% to
244
0.015% in the greenhouse soils, and 0.0009% to 0.0015% in the field soils. These results
245
show that the ARGs abundance in the chicken manures and greenhouse soils was 9.9-220.1
246
and 5.5-8.9 times higher, respectively, than those in the field soils.
247
In total, 22 types of ARGs were found in all samples (Figure 3b). Tetracycline resistance
248
(TCR) genes were the most abundant ARGs in the chicken manures, followed by those
249
encoding resistance to CPC, sulfonamide, aminoglycoside, and purine. However, the most
250
abundant ARGs in the greenhouse soils were those encoding MDR, followed by ARGs
251
encoding resistance to macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin (MLS), acridine, tetracycline,
252
and fosmidomycin. A higher abundance of MDR genes and a lower abundance of other ARG
253
classes were observed in the greenhouse soils compared with the chicken manures (Figure 3b).
254
The abundance of MDR genes in the greenhouse soils was 4.7-12.5 times greater than that in
255
the field soils, and no significant (P ≤ 0.05) difference was found among the GL-F4, PLK-F12,
256
and HS-F4. Additionally, the abundance of MDR genes in PLK-G6/F6 was only 67.6% of that 12
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 13 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
257
in PLK-G12, which suggests that uncovering a shed noticeably decreased the abundance of
258
MDR genes.
259
A comparison of the diversity and abundance of the 8 dominant ARG classes in the
260
manures and soils is shown in Figure 4. These dominant ARGs included MDR (20 subtypes),
261
TCR (25 subtypes), beta-lactam resistance (10 subtypes), CPC resistance (11 subtypes),
262
fosfomycin resistance (3 subtypes), aminoglycoside resistance (16 subtypes), acridine
263
resistance (5 subtypes), and MLS resistance (8 subtypes) genes. The dominant subtypes of
264
ARGs in the greenhouse soils were mexF and bpeF (MDR), which had a higher relative
265
abundance than those in the chicken manure and field soils (Figure 4). Simultaneously, the
266
abundant subtypes of ARGs in the chicken manures were tetA(G), tetX2, tetA, tetX, tetA(33)
267
(TCR), followed by aminoglycoside acetyltransferase (AAT), aadA, aphD (aminoglycoside
268
ARGs), and cmx (CPC ARGs).
269
Significant (P ≤ 0.05) positive correlations were found in the ARGs between the chicken
270
manure and greenhouse soil using univariate analysis of covariance, e. g., GL-M and GL-4 (R
271
= 0.809), PLK-M and PLK-G12 (R = 0.996), PLK-M and PLK-G6/F6 (R = 0.985), and HS-M
272
and HS-G4 (R = 0.993) (Table S9). Interestingly, significant (P ≤ 0.05) positive correlations
273
were observed between the residual levels of tetracyclines, sulfonamides, lincosamides,
274
fluoroquinolones, and CPC and their corresponding relative abundance of ARGs class with
275
high correlation coefficients of 0.809, 0.815, 0.752, 0.890, 0.734, and 0.853, respectively
276
(Table S10). The abundance of ARGs in the greenhouse soils gradually increased with the
277
extension of greenhouse planting years with a highly positive correlation coefficient (R =
278
0.786, P ≤ 0.05) (Figure S1 and Table S12). 13
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
279
Page 14 of 33
Diversity and Abundance of HPB in the Manures and Soils
280
The diversity and relative abundance (i.e., the HPB 16S hit number divided by the
281
Greengenes 16S hit number in each sample, and Greengenes 16S hit number in each
282
metagenomic iTags dataset is shown in Figure S2) of HPB in the chicken manures and soils is
283
shown in Figure 5. A total of 32 pathogenic bacteria were found. Mycobacterium tuberculosis
284
and M. ulcerans were the dominant HPB species in the soils, followed by Bordetella pertussis,
285
Bacillus anthracis, Brucella melitensis, Corynebacterium diphtheria, Bartonella quintana,
286
and M. leprae. The abundance of M. tuberculosis and M. ulcerans in the greenhouse soils was
287
1.7-14.0 and 1.6-2.4 times higher, respectively, compared with the field soils. The relative
288
abundance of these two HPB in PLK-G6/F6 was 45.9% and 34.7% of the PLK-G12,
289
respectively. The dominant HPB in the chicken manures were B. anthracis and B. pertussis
290
were the dominant HPB species in the chicken manures, followed by Staphylococcus aureus,
291
C. diphtheria, Enterococcus faecalis, B. melitensis, M. tuberculosis, C. jeikeium, and M.
292
ulcerans (Figure 5). The mean relative abundance of HPB in the chicken manures was
293
considerably higher than that in the greenhouse and field soils, and the highest relative
294
abundant HPB was B. pertussis in GL-M, E. faecalis in PLK-M, and B. anthracis in HS-M.
295
Significant (P ≤ 0.01) positive correlations were found in the HPB between the chicken
296
manure and greenhouse soil, e.g., GL-M and GL-G4 (R = 0.691), PLK-M and PLK-G12 (R =
297
0.970), PLK-M and PLK-G6/F6 (R = 0.899), and HS-M and HS-G4 (R = 0.964) (Table S9).
298
Similarly, a significant positive correlation (R = 0.693, P ≤ 0.01) was also found between
299
HPB abundance in the greenhouse soils and greenhouse planting years (Figure S1 and Table
300
S12). 14
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 15 of 33
301
Environmental Science & Technology
HPB Carrying ARGs in the Manures and Soils
302
Figure 6 shows the diversity and relative abundance (i.e., the HPB carrying ARGs hit
303
number divided by the Greengenes 16S hit number in each sample) of HPB carrying ARGs in
304
the chicken manures and soils. As shown in Figure 6 and Table S13, a total of 46 HPB
305
carrying ARGs were found, and the ARGs harbored in the HPB contained 25 subtypes, such
306
as sul1, cmx, tetT, adeB, OXA-53, vanRG, aac, msrA, tetM etc. The most dominant HPB
307
carrying ARGs in the chicken manures was B. anthracis harboring sulfonamide sul1 followed
308
by M. tuberculosis (MLSRP), C. diphtheriae (sulfonamide dihydropteroate synthase), C.
309
jeikeium (CPC cmx), S. aureus (aminoglycoside phosphotransferase), E. faecalis
310
(aminoglycoside phosphotransferase), and S. aureus (glycopeptide resistance protein). The
311
mean relative abundance of HPB carrying ARGs in the chicken manures was 1.9 and 23.4
312
times higher, respectively, than that in the greenhouse and field soils. As shown in Figure 6,
313
both M. tuberculosis (MLSRP) and B. anthracis (sul1) were the most dominant HPB carrying
314
ARGs in the soils, with a higher abundance inside the greenhouses compared with the fields.
315
The relative abundance of these HPB carrying ARGs in PLK-G6/F6 decreased significantly to
316
57.3% and 47.8%, respectively, of the abundance in PLK-G12. In this study, the MLSRP
317
subtype was found in M. tuberculosis, S. flexneri, S. dysenteriae, and S. agalactiae. The MDR
318
gene can be harbored by some pathogenic bacteria such as Acinetobacter baumannii,
319
Salmonella enteric, Yersinia enterocolitica, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Shigella boydii, and S.
320
dysenteriae. Additionally, E. faecalis can carry diverse ARGs such as aminoglycoside
321
phosphotransferase,
322
nucleotidyltransferase, tetT, and vanRG.
sulfonamide
dihydropteroate
15
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
synthase,
lincosamide
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 16 of 33
323
Significant (P ≤ 0.01) positive correlations were found in the HPB carrying ARGs
324
between all chicken manures and all greenhouse soils, such as PLK-M and PLK-G12 (R =
325
0.751), PLK-M and PLK-G6/F6 (R = 0.849), HS-M and HS-G4 (R = 0.626), and GL-M and
326
GL-G4 (R = 751) (Table S9). There were significant (P ≤ 0.01) positive correlations between
327
all HPB carrying ARGs and all ARGs (R = 0.901) and between all HPB carrying ARGs and
328
all HPB (R = 0.870) in all samples (Table S11). Additionally, the relative abundance of HPB
329
carrying ARGs in the greenhouse soils gradually increased with an extension of the
330
greenhouse planting years, and a significant positive correlation (R = 0.756, P ≤ 0.05) is
331
presented in Figure S1 and Table S12.
332 333 334
DISCUSSION
335
Antibiotic residues in soil have been shown to be correlated with manure type, manure
336
application rate, soil type, vegetable species, cultivation method, and environmental
337
conditions.26 In this study, several classes of antibiotics were found in chicken manures and
338
greenhouse soils, which may have resulted from the long-term fertilization of
339
antibiotic-contaminated chicken manure in the greenhouse soils.27 Similarly, the residual
340
concentrations of tetracyclines, sulfonamides, and CPC were 4.5-24.7, 5.9-33.4, and 3.3-17.9
341
mg/kg, respectively, in manures (swine, bird, and cattle) and soils collected from Shanghai,
342
Eastern China.28 In addition, Huang et al.29 reported that the residual levels of TC, OTC, CTC,
343
ENR, CIP, and ofloxacin ranged from 189.8 μg/kg to 2668.9 μg/kg in farmland soils from
344
four coastal cities in Fujian, Eastern China. In the current study, the observed lower 16
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 17 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
345
concentrations of antibiotics in the greenhouse soils compared with the chicken manures may
346
be due to the adsorption, biodegradation, photolysis, and infiltration of antibiotics in the
347
soil.19 Nevertheless, the long-term repeated application of chicken manure can still lead to the
348
persistent contamination of greenhouse soils with antibiotics. Meanwhile, it is noteworthy that
349
higher residual levels of antibiotics were observed in PLK-G12 (organic vegetable cultivation)
350
compared with GL-G4 and HS-G4 (traditional vegetable cultivation) (Figure 2), which may
351
be attributed to the high application of chicken manure in the organic vegetable base (Table
352
S1). Similarly, the absence of antibiotic residues in the field soils may be attributed to the fact
353
that chicken manure was not applied to these soils.
354
In this study, the long-term application of chicken manure led to a noticeable increase in
355
ARGs diversity and abundance in the greenhouse soils. Other studies have reported that
356
different types of manure resulted in a marked increase in ARGs abundance in soil,9,30 such as
357
ermF, sul1, and sul2.18 Cook et al.31 reported that the abundance of sulfonamides,
358
streptomycins, and tetracyclines ARGs increased up to 3 orders of magnitude in soil after
359
poultry litter application. Several pathways have been identified as potential contributors to
360
the diversity and abundance of ARGs in greenhouse soils: (i) Inherent ARGs in the natural
361
environment; (ii) ARGs carried by chicken manure; (iii) ARGs induced by antibiotic residues;
362
(iv) Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of ARGs among soil bacteria. Pruden et al.32
363
demonstrated that ARGs can be transferred between non-pathogens, pathogens, and even
364
distantly related organisms (Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria) by mobile genetic
365
elements such as class 1 integrons (intl1), plasmids, insertion sequences, transposons, and
366
phages. In this study, an integron database was constructed based on 411 intl1 sequences 17
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 18 of 33
367
(Table S14). The relative abundance of intl1 was considerably higher in the chicken manures
368
than that in the greenhouse soils, and no intl1 sequence was observed in the field soils (Figure
369
S3 and Table S15). The results show that chicken manures contained a large number of intl1
370
sequences, and furthermore, these sequences may be transported into greenhouse soils
371
following land application.
372
Following the long-term application of chicken manures, the accumulation of MDR genes
373
was observed in the greenhouse soils compared with the field soils, which may be due to the
374
presences of different classes of antibiotics. A similar finding was reported by Heuer et al.,9
375
who found an accumulation of sulfonamide ARGs in arable soils due to repeated applications
376
of pig manure containing SDZ residues. In the current study, the dominant MDR subtypes,
377
such as mexF, bpeF, and mexD, encode an efflux pump that export intracellular antibiotics out
378
of cells, which is an important mechanism of resistance in MDR genes.33 Meanwhile, the
379
most abundant gene found in chicken manures was the TCR gene, which is in agreement with
380
those findings reported for piggery manure,34 swine manure,35 and cow manure.36
381
The findings of this study revealed that the levels of antibiotic residues, ARGs, HPB, and
382
HPB carrying ARGs varied greatly with sample type and sampling location, and their
383
abundance in the greenhouse soils was highly positively correlated with greenhouse planting
384
years. The most dominant ARG classes in the chicken manure and greenhouse soils were the
385
TCR and MDR genes, respectively. The most dominant HPB were B. anthracis and B.
386
pertussis in the chicken manures and M. tuberculosis and M. ulcerans in the greenhouse soils.
387
The most highly abundant HPB carrying ARGs were B. anthracis (sul1) in the chicken
388
manures and M. tuberculosis (MLSRP) and B. anthracis (sul1) in the greenhouse soils. A 18
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 19 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
389
good positive correlation was found in antibiotic residues, ARGs, HPB, and HPB carrying
390
ARGs between chicken manures and greenhouse soils, and their abundance in the greenhouse
391
soils
392
metatranscriptomic analyses are required to reveal the expression levels of ARGs (particularly
393
ARGs harbored in the HPB) in soil microbial communities.
increased
with
an
extension
of
the
greenhouse
planting
years.
Further
394 395
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
396
Supporting Information
397
Increased abundance of antibiotic residues, ARGs, HPB, and HPB carrying ARGs with the
398
extension of greenhouse planting years (Figure S1); relative abundance of the Greengenes
399
16S hit number in metagenomic iTag datasets (Figure S2); relative abundance of class 1
400
integrons in chicken manures and soils (Figure S3); information on three vegetable bases
401
(Table S1); information on three manure samples (Table S2); physicochemical properties of
402
all samples (Table S3); optimal analysis conditions of antibiotics (Table S4); metagenome
403
MG-RAST IDs and sample sizes (Table S5); composition of the ARDB database (Table S6);
404
composition of the HPB database (Table S7); antibiotic residues in all samples (Table S8);
405
analysis of covariance on antibiotic residues, ARGs, HPB, and HPB carrying ARGs between
406
chicken manures and greenhouse soils (Table S9); analysis of covariance between antibiotic
407
residues and ARGs in all samples (Table S10); analysis of covariance between ARGs, HPB,
408
and HPB carrying ARGs in all samples (Table S11); analysis of covariance between
409
environmental pollutants (antibiotic residues, ARGs, HPB, and HPB carrying ARGs) in the
410
greenhouse soils and greenhouse planting years (Table S12); diversity and abundance of HPB 19
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 20 of 33
411
carrying ARGs in chicken manures and soils (Table S13); list of class 1 integrons (Table S14);
412
and abundance and diversity of class 1 integrons in chicken manures and soils (Table S15).
413
This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
414 415
AUTHOR INFORMATION
416
Corresponding Author
417
*Tel./Fax: +86-571-88982433. E-mail:
[email protected].
418
Notes
419
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
420 421
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
422
This work was supported by the National Nature Science Foundation of China (Nos.
423
21377112, 41271489, 20907040) and the National High Technology R&D Program of China
424
(No. 2012AA06A204).
425 426
REFERENCES
427
(1) Cheng, G. Y.; Hao, H. H.; Xie, S. Y.; Wang, X.; Dai, M. H.; Huang, L. L.; Yuan, Z. H.
428
Antibiotic alternatives: the substitution of antibiotics in animal husbandry? Front. Microbiol.
429
2014, 5, 217.
430
(2) Liu, A. Q.; Wang, Y.; Xu, B.; Yang, W.; Ge, Y.; Wu, X.; Peng, C. H.; Chang, J. The
431
comparison on economic values of ecosystem services for greenhouse agriculture of different
432
climatic regions in China: two case studies from northern China and the middle and lower 20
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 21 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
433
reaches of Yangtze River. Acta Ecol. Sin. 2010, 30 (20), 5677-5686.
434
(3) Li, X. W.; Xie, Y. F.; Wang, J. F.; Christakos, G.; Si, J. L.; Zhao, H. N.; Ding, Y. Q.; Li, J.
435
Influence of planting patterns on fluoroquinolone residues in the soil of an intensive vegetable
436
cultivation area in northern China. Sci. Total Environ. 2013, 458, 63-69
437
(4) Joy, S. R.; Bartelt-Hunt, S. L.; Snow, D. D.; Gilley, J. E.; Woodbury, B. L.; Parker, D. B.;
438
Marx, D.B.; Li, X. Fate and transport of antimicrobials and antimicrobial resistance genes in
439
soil and runoff following land application of swine manure slurry. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2013,
440
47 (21), 12081-12088.
441
(5) Wu, X. L.; Xiang, L.; Yan, Q. Y.; Jiang, Y. N.; Li, Y. W.; Huang, X. P.; Li, H.; Cai, Q. Y.;
442
Mo, C. H. Distribution and risk assessment of quinolone antibiotics in the soils from organic
443
vegetable farms of a subtropical city, Southern China. Sci. Total Environ. 2014, 487, 399-406.
444
(6) Rosendahl, I.; Siemens, J.; Groeneweg, J.; Linzbach, E.; Laabs, V.; Herrmann, C.;
445
Vereecken, H.; Amelung, W. Dissipation and sequestration of the veterinary antibiotic
446
sulfadiazine and its metabolites under field conditions. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2011, 45 (12),
447
5216-5222.
448
(7) Wang, P.; Zhang, X. N.; Wang, L.; Zhen, Z.; Tang, M. L.; Li, J. B. Subinhibitory
449
concentrations of ciprofloxacin induce SOS response and mutations of antibiotic resistance in
450
bacteria. Ann. Microbiol. 2010, 60 (3), 511-517.
451
(8) Graves, A. K.; Liwimbi, L.; Israel, D. W.; van Heugten, E.; Robinson, B.; Cahoon, C. W.;
452
Lubbers, J. F. Distribution of ten antibiotic resistance genes in E. coli isolates from swine
453
manure, lagoon effluent and soil collected from a lagoon waste application field. Folia
454
Microbiol. 2011, 56 (2), 131-137. 21
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 22 of 33
455
(9) Heuer, H.; Solehati, Q.; Zimmerling, U.; Kleineidam, K.; Schloter, M.; Muller, T.; Focks,
456
A.; Thiele-Bruhn, S.; Smalla, K. Accumulation of sulfonamide resistance genes in arable soils
457
due to repeated application of manure containing sulfadiazine. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 2011,
458
77 (7), 2527-2530.
459
(10) Zhu, Y. G.; Johnson, T. A.; Su, J. Q.; Qiao, M.; Guo, G. X.; Stedtfeld, R. D.; Hashsham, S.
460
A.; Tiedje, J. M. Diverse and abundant antibiotic resistance genes in Chinese swine farms.
461
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2013, 110 (9), 3435-3440.
462
(11) Fischbach, M. A.; Walsh, C. T. Antibiotics for emerging pathogens. Science 2009, 325
463
(5944), 1089-1093.
464
(12) Forsberg, K. J.; Reyes, A.; Bin, W.; Selleck, E. M.; Sommer, M. O. A.; Dantas, G. The
465
shared antibiotic resistome of soil bacteria and human pathogens. Science 2012, 337 (6098),
466
1107-1111.
467
(13) Negreanu, Y.; Pasternak, Z.; Jurkevitch, E.; Cytryn, E. Impact of treated wastewater
468
irrigation on antibiotic resistance in agricultural soils. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46 (9),
469
4800-4808.
470
(14) Micallef, S. A.; Goldstein, R. E. R.; George, A.; Ewing, L.; Tall, B.; Boyer, M. S.; Joseph,
471
S. W.; Sapkota, A. R. Diversity, distribution and antibiotic resistance of Enterococcus spp.
472
Recovered from tomatoes, leaves, water and soil on US Mid-Atlantic farms. Food Microbiol.
473
2013, 36 (2), 465-474.
474
(15) Yang, Q. X.; Ren, S. W.; Niu, T. Q.; Guo, Y. H.; Qi, S. Y.; Han, X. K.; Liu, D.; Pan, F.
475
Distribution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in chicken manure and manure-fertilized
476
vegetables. Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res. 2014, 21 (2), 1231-1241. 22
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 23 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
477
(16) Wheeler, C.; Vogt, T. M.; Armstrong, G. L.; Vaughan, G.; Weltman, A.; Nainan, O. V.;
478
Dato, V.; Xia, G. L.; Waller, K. An outbreak of hepatitis A associated with green onions. N.
479
Engl. J. Med. 2005, 353 (9), 890-897.
480
(17) Forslund, A.; Plauborg, F.; Andersen, M. N.; Markussen, B.; Dalsgaard, A. Leaching of
481
human pathogens in repacked soil lysimeters and contamination of potato tubers under
482
subsurface drip irrigation in Denmark. Water Res. 2011, 45 (15), 4367-4380.
483
(18) Fahrenfeld, N.; Knowlton, K.; Krometis, L. A.; Hession, W. C.; Xia, K.; Lipscomb, E.;
484
Libuit, K.; Green, B. L.; Pruden, A. Effect of manure application on abundance of antibiotic
485
resistance genes and their attenuation rates in soil: field-scale mass balance approach. Environ.
486
Sci. Technol. 2014, 48 (5), 2643-2650.
487
(19) Fang, H.; Han, Y. L.; Yin, Y. M.; Pan, X.; Yu, Y. L. Variations in dissipation rate,
488
microbial function and antibiotic resistance due to repeated introductions of manure
489
containing sulfadiazine and chlortetracycline to soil. Chemosphere 2014, 96, 51-56.
490
(20) Ho, Y. B.; Zakaria, M. P.; Latif, P. A.; Saari, N. Simultaneous determination of veterinary
491
antibiotics and hormone in broiler manure, soil and manure compost by liquid
492
chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. J. Chromatogr. A 2012, 1262, 160-168.
493
(21) Liu, B.; Pop, M. ARDB-Antibiotic Resistance Genes Database. Nucleic Acids Res. 2009,
494
37, D443-D447.
495
(22) McDonald, D.; Price, M. N.; Goodrich, J.; Nawrocki, E. P.; DeSantis, T. Z.; Probst, A.;
496
Andersen, G. L.; Knight, R.; Hugenholtz, P. An improved Greengenes taxonomy with explicit
497
ranks for ecological and evolutionary analyses of bacteria and archaea. ISME J. 2012, 6 (3),
498
610-618. 23
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 24 of 33
499
(23) Chen, L. H.; Xiong, Z. H.; Sun, L. L.; Yang, J.; Jin, Q. VFDB 2012 update: toward the
500
genetic diversity and molecular evolution of bacterial virulence factors. Nucleic Acids Res.
501
2012, 40 (D1), D641-D645.
502
(24) Qu, A.; Brulc, J. M.; Wilson, M. K.; Law, B. F.; Theoret, J. R.; Joens, L. A.; Konkel, M.
503
E.; Angly, F.; Dinsdale, E. A.; Edwards, R. A. Comparative metagenomics reveals host
504
specific metavirulomes and horizontalGene transfer elements in the chicken cecum
505
microbiome. PLoS One 2008, 3 (8), e2945.
506
(25) Oakley, B. B.; Morales, C. A.; Line, J.; Berrang, M. E.; Meinersmann, R. J.; Tillman, G.
507
E.; Wise, M. G.; Siragusa, G. R.; Hiett, K. L.; Seal, B. S. The poultry-associated microbiome:
508
network analysis and farm-to-fork characterizations. PLoS One 2013, 8 (2), e57190.
509
(26) Li, Y. W.; Mo, C. H.; Zhao, N.; Tai, Y. P.; Bao, Y. P.; Wang, J. Y.; Li, M. Y.; Liang, W. M.
510
Investigation of sulfonamides and tetracyclines antibiotics in soils from various vegetable
511
fields. Environ. Sci. 2009, 30 (6), 1762-1766.
512
(27) Hong, P. Y.; Yannarell, A. C.; Dai, Q. H.; Ekizoglu, M.; Mackie, R. I. Monitoring the
513
perturbation of soil and groundwater microbial communities due to pig production activities.
514
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 2013, 79 (8), 2620-2629.
515
(28) Ji, X. L.; Shen, Q. H.; Liu, F.; Ma, J.; Xu, G.; Wang, Y.L.; Wu, M. H. Antibiotic
516
resistance gene abundances associated with antibiotics and heavy metals in animal manures
517
and agricultural soils adjacent to feedlots in Shanghai, China. J. Hazard. Mater. 2012, 235,
518
178-185.
519
(29) Huang, X.; Liu, C. X.; Li, K.; Liu, F.; Liao, D. R.; Liu, L.; Zhu, G. F.; Liao, J. Occurrence
520
and distribution of veterinary antibiotics and tetracycline resistance genes in farmland soils 24
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 25 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
521
around swine feedlots in Fujian Province, China. Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res. 2013, 20 (12),
522
9066-9074.
523
(30) Heuer, H.; Smalla, K. Manure and sulfadiazine synergistically increased bacterial
524
antibiotic resistance in soil over at least two months. Environ. Microbiol. 2007, 9 (3),
525
657-666.
526
(31)Cook, K. L.; Netthisinghe, A. M. P.; Gilfillen, R. A. Detection of pathogens, indicators,
527
and antibiotic resistance genes after land application of poultry litter. J. Environ. Qual. 2014,
528
43 (5), 1546-1558.
529
(32)Pruden, A.; Pei, R. T.; Storteboom, H.; Carlson, K. H. Antibiotic resistance genes as
530
emerging contaminants: studies in northern Colorado. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2006, 40 (23),
531
7445-7450.
532
(33) Martinez-Garcia, E.; de Lorenzo, V. Engineering multiple genomic deletions in
533
Gram-negative bacteria: analysis of the multi-resistant antibiotic profile of Pseudomonas
534
putida KT2440. Environ. Microbiol. 2011, 13 (10), 2702-2716.
535
(34) Heuer, H.; Kopmann, C.; Binh, C. T. T.; Top, E. M.; Smalla, K. Spreading antibiotic
536
resistance through spread manure: characteristics of a novel plasmid type with low %G plus C
537
content. Environ. Microbiol. 2009, 11 (4), 937-949.
538
(35) Wu, N.; Qiao, M.; Zhang, B.; Cheng, W. D.; Zhu, Y. G. Abundance and diversity of
539
tetracycline resistance genes in soils adjacent to representative swine feedlots in China.
540
Environ. Sci. Technol. 2010, 44 (18), 6933-6939.
541
(36) Munir, M.; Xagoraraki, I. Levels of antibiotic resistance genes in manure, biosolids, and
542
fertilized soil. J. Environ. Qual. 2011, 40 (1), 248-255. 25
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
543
Page 26 of 33
FIGURE CAPTIONS
544 545
Figure 1 Flowchart of the metagenomic analysis for antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs),
546
human pathogenic bacteria (HPB), and HPB carrying ARGs in chicken manures and soils.
547 548
Figure 2 Residual levels of antibiotics in chicken manures and soils. Each value is the mean
549
of three replicates.
550 551
Figure 3 Relative abundance of total antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in chicken manures
552
and soils (a). The diversity and abundance of different classes of ARGs in both manures and
553
soils (b). All ARGs were categorized according to the classes of antibiotics. The number of
554
iTags in each sample was normalized to the same size (20,000,000). The relative abundance
555
of ARGs was defined as the ARGs hit number divided by metagenomic iTags number in each
556
sample. "1/10000" indicates one ARG-like iTag in ten thousand Illumina iTags. Error bars
557
represent one standard deviation of the mean. Each ARG class was classified into different
558
subtypes
559
macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin.
according
to
different
resistance
mechanisms.
MLS:
560 561
Figure 4 Heat maps of the dominant ARG subtypes in chicken manures and soils. (a):
562
multidrug resistance genes (MDR); (b): tetracycline resistance genes; (c): aminoglycoside
563
(AG) resistance genes, acridine resistance genes, and macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin
564
(MLS) resistance genes; (d): beta-lactam resistance genes, chloramphenicol (CPC) resistance 26
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 27 of 33
Environmental Science & Technology
565
genes, and the fosfomycin resistance genes. The color intensity in each panel shows the
566
common logarithm value of the ARG subtypes hit number in each normalized metagenomic
567
iTags dataset (10,000,000), referring to the color bar below. AAT: AG acetyltransferase;
568
ARPA: AG resistance protein B; KNT: kanamycin nucleotidyltransferase; FAT: fused AG
569
3'-adenyltransferase-AG 6'-acetyltransferase; HARK: hydroxyurea antibiotic resistant kinase;
570
3-PT: AG 3'-phosphotransferase; APT: AG phosphotransferase; ARPB: AG resistance protein
571
B; GAT: gentamicin acetyltransferase; GRP: gentamicin resistance protein; ARPB: acridine
572
resistance protein B; AFRPB: acriflavin resistance protein B; AEP: acridine efflux pump;
573
ARPA: acridine resistance protein A; AFRPA: acriflavin resistance protein B; MLSRP: MLS
574
resistance protein; CAT: CPC acetyltransferase; CFE: CPC and florfenicol (FFC) exporter;
575
CFRP: CPC and FFC resistance protein; CRD: CPC resistance determinant; CT: CPC
576
transporter; FRPB: fosfomycin resistance protein B.
577 578
Figure 5 Diversity and relative abundance of human pathogenic bacteria (HPB) in chicken
579
manures and soils. The relative abundance of HPB is defined as the HPB 16S rRNA gene hit
580
number divided by Greengenes 16S rRNA gene hit number.
581 582
Figure 6 Diversity and relative abundance of human pathogenic bacteria (HPB) carrying
583
antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in chicken manures and soils. The relative abundance of
584
HPB carrying ARGs is defined as the HPB carrying ARGs hit number divided by Greengenes
585
16S rRNA gene hit number in each sample). MLSRP: macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin
586
resistance protein. 27
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 1
Guli (GL)、 Pulangke (PLK)、Hushu (HS) vegetable planting bases Sampling
Greenhouse soil (G)、field soil (F)、chicken manure (M) Sample IDs
PLK-G12 PLK-G6/F6 PLK-F12 PLK-M
GL-G4 GL-F4 GL-M
Pair-end reads merging
High-throughput shotgun sequencing
Sample preparation
587
Page 28 of 33
HS-G4 HS-F4 HS-M
DNA preparation Illumina HiSeq sequencing
Raw reads datasets Clean pair-end reads
Pair-end read 1 (100 bp)
5' 5' 5'
Overlap region 3' 3' 3' 3' 3' 3'
Pair-end read 2 (100 bp)
Merging Merged read (150 bp) 5'
3'
Overlap region
5' 5'
3'
10-50 bp
3'
Merged read (190 bp)
Antibiotic resistance genes database (ARDB)
BLASTX
Illumina iTags (150-190 bp)
BLASTN
Script Identity ≥ 90%
Alignment ≥ 75 bp
Alignment ≥ 75 bp
BLAST results of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs)
Greengene 16S rRNA gene database Filtration by cutoff
Filtration by cutoff
Script Identity ≥ 90%
Bioinformatic analysis
5' 5' 5'
Extracting 16S rRNA gene iTags
Script
BLAST results of 16S rRNA gene
BLASTN Script
Extracting ARGs-like iTags
Human pathogenic bacteria (HPB) 16S rRNA gene database
Script Filtration by cutoff Identity ≥ 99% Alignment ≥ 150 bp Mismatch ≤ 1 bp
BLASTN Filtration by cutoff
Script Identity ≥ 90%
Alignment ≥ 75 bp
HPB carrying ARGs
588 28
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
BLAST results of HPB HPB genome from NCBI
Page 29 of 33
589
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 2
590 Tetracycline (TC)
GL-M
Oxytetracycline (OTC)
GL-G4
Chloroteracycline (CTC)
GL-F4
Sulfadiazine (SDZ)
PLK-M
Sulfadimidine (SDD)
PLK-G12
Sulfamethoxazole (SMX)
PLK-G6/F6
Lincomycin (LCC)
PLK-F12
Norfloxacin (NFC) HS-M
Ciprofloxacin (CPF)
HS-G4
Enrofloxacin (ENR)
HS-F4
Chloramphenicol (CPC) 0
591
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
Antibiotic residues in manure and soil samples (μg/kg)
592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 29
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
605
Figure 3 (a)
GL-M GL-G4 GL-F4 PLK-M PLK-G12 PLK-G6/F6 PLK-F12 HS-M HS-G4 HS-F4 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 18
20
22
24
26
Relative abundance of total ARGs in each sample (1/10000) (b) GL-M GL-G4 GL-G4
GL-F4 PLK-M PLK-G12
GL-F4 PLK-G12
enlarge
PLK-G6/F6 PLK-F12 HS-G4
PLK-G6/F6 PLK-F12
HS-F4
0
0.4
0.8
1.2
1.6
HS-M HS-G4 HS-F4
606
0 4 8 12 16 20 24 28 Relative abundance of each ARG class in each sample (1/10000)
607 608 609 610 611 612 613 30
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
acridine aminoglycosides beta-lactams bicyclomycins chloramphenicol fluoroquinolones fosmidomycins glycopeptides glycylcyclines lincosamides macrolides MLS multidrug penicillins peptides purines quinolones streptomycins sulfonamides tetracenomycins tetracyclines others
Page 30 of 33
Page 31 of 33
mdtF AmrB acrA mexA mexE adeB mdfA mdtO mexG adeA oprN mdtH
Acridine ARGs
Aminoglycoside ARGs
mdtL mexB AAT aadA aphD ARPA KNT FAT HARK 3-PT APT ARPB aac6 aadB GAT GRP aac strA ARPB AFRPB AEP ARPA AFRPA MLSRP ermX ermGM ermFS ermT mef msrA ermG
(d)
(c) 0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
1.4
1.6
616 31
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
1.8
2
Tetracycline ARGs
Multidrug resistance genes (MDR)
Rpos
Beta-lactam ARGs
sdeY acrB
Fosfomycin ARGs Chloramphenicol ARGs
bpeF mexD
MLS ARGs
(b) tetA(G) tetA(31) tetX2 tetA tetX tetA(33) tetM tetL tetT tetQ tetG tetW tetY tet32 tetS tetA(39) tetA(P) tetB tetV tetO tetA(D) tetA(41) tetA(B) tetA(M) tetH OXA CARB mecA Sed1 PSE-1 TEM-21 VIM-18 ACT-1 L1 ampc catB2 catB3 ceoB cmlA cmx CAT CFE CFRP floR CRD CT FRP fosB rosA
mexF
615
HS-F4
HS-G4
HS-M
PLK-F12
PLK-G6/F6
PLK-G12
PLK-M
GL-F4
GL-G4
GL-M
HS-F4
HS-G4
HS-M
PLK-F12
PLK-G6/F6
PLK-G12
PLK-M
GL-F4
(a)
GL-G4
Figure 4
GL-M
614
Environmental Science & Technology
Environmental Science & Technology
617
Page 32 of 33
Figure 5
618 Acinetobacter baumannii Acinetobacter calcoaceticus Bacillus anthracis Bacillus cereus Bartonella henselae Bartonella quintana Bordetella pertussis Brucella melitensis Burkholderia cenocepacia Clostridium botulinum Clostridium difficile Clostridium novyi Clostridium perfringens Corynebacterium diphtheriae Corynebacterium jeikeium Enterococcus faecalis Legionella pneumophila Listeria ivanovii Mycobacterium leprae Mycobacterium tuberculosis Mycobacterium ulcerans Neisseria meningitidis Pseudomonas aeruginosa Salmonella enterica Shigella boydii Shigella dysenteriae Shigella flexneri Staphylococcus aureus Streptococcus agalactiae Streptococcus pyogenes Yersinia enterocolitica Yersinia pestis
GL-M GL-G4 GL-F4 PLK-M PLK-G12 PLK-G6/F6 PLK-F12 HS-M HS-G4 HS-F4 0
619
10
20
30
40
50
Relative abundance of human pathogenic bacteria (‰)
620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 32
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 33 of 33
629
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 6
630 Acinetobacter baumannii (aminoglycoside aac) Acinetobacter baumannii (aminoglycoside kinase) Acinetobacter baumannii (chloramphenicol acetyltransferase) Acinetobacter baumannii (multidrug adeB) Acinetobacter baumannii (sulfonamide dihydropteroate synthase) Bacillus anthracis (sulfonamide sulI) Bacillus cereus (others) Clostridium botulinum (aminoglycoside acetyltransferase) Clostridium difficile (tetracycline tetM) Corynebacterium diphtheriae (sulfonamide dihydropteroate synthase) Corynebacterium jeikeium (chloramphenicol cmx) Corynebacterium jeikeium (others) Clostridium perfringens (tetracycline tetT) Enterococcus faecalis (aminoglycoside phosphotransferase) Enterococcus faecalis (sulfonamide dihydropteroate synthase) Enterococcus faecalis (lincosamide nucleotidyltransferase) Enterococcus faecalis (others) Enterococcus faecalis (tetracycline tetT) Enterococcus faecalis (glycopeptide vanRG) Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MLSRP) Mycobacterium tuberculosis (others) Pseudomonas aeruginosa (multidrug resistance protein) Pseudomonas aeruginosa (tetracycline tetM) Staphylococcus aureus (purine N-6-methyltransferase) Staphylococcus aureus (aminoglycoside phosphotransferase) Staphylococcus aureus (beta-lactamase) Staphylococcus aureus (chloramphenicol acetyltransferase) Staphylococcus aureus (glycopeptide resistance protein) Staphylococcus aureus (MLS msrA) Staphylococcus aureus (others) Staphylococcus aureus (penicillin binding protein pbp2a) Streptococcus agalactiae (MLSRP) Shigella boydii (multidrug efflux system protein mdtO) Shigella dysenteriae (acridine resistance protein) Shigella dysenteriae (MLSRP) Shigella dysenteriae (multidrug resistance protein) Salmonella enterica (beta-lactam OXA-53) Salmonella enterica (chloramphenicol exporter) Salmonella enterica (sulfonamide dihydropteroate synthase) Salmonella enterica (multidrug resistance protein) Salmonella enterica (penicillin binding protein pbp2a) Shigella flexneri (acridine resistance protein) Shigella flexneri (MLSRP) Streptococcus pyogenes (tetracycline tetT) Yersinia enterocolitica (multidrug resistance protein) Yersinia pestis (aminoglycoside acetyltransferase)
GL-M
GL-G4
GL-F4
PLK-M
PLK-G12
PLK-G6/F6
PLK-F12
HS-M
HS-G4
HS-F4 0
631
10
20
30
40
Relative abundance of HPB carrying ARGs (‰)
33
ACS Paragon Plus Environment