生物
堆肥
微观世界
壤土
基因组
肥料
16S核糖体RNA
生物技术
抵抗性
温室
土壤水分
粪便管理
农学
兽医学
抗生素耐药性
细菌
微生物学
生态学
抗生素
整合子
基因
遗传学
医学
作者
Ishi Keenum,Lauren Wind,Partha Ray,Giselle Kristi Guron,Chaoqi Chen,K.F. Knowlton,Monica A. Ponder,Amy Pruden
标识
DOI:10.1111/1462-2920.16022
摘要
Summary Prior research demonstrated the potential for agricultural production systems to contribute to the environmental spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). However, there is a need for integrated assessment of critical management points for minimizing this potential. Shotgun metagenomic sequencing data were analysed to comprehensively compare total ARG profiles characteristic of amendments (manure or compost) derived from either beef or dairy cattle (with and without dosing antibiotics according to conventional practice), soil (loamy sand or silty clay loam) and vegetable (lettuce or radish) samples collected across studies carried out at laboratory‐, microcosm‐ and greenhouse‐scale. Vegetables carried the greatest diversity of ARGs ( n = 838) as well as the most ARG‐mobile genetic element co‐occurrences ( n = 945). Radishes grown in manure‐ or compost‐amended soils harboured a higher relative abundance of total (0.91 and 0.91 ARGs/16S rRNA gene) and clinically relevant ARGs than vegetables from other experimental conditions (average: 0.36 ARGs/16S rRNA gene). Lettuce carried the highest relative abundance of pathogen gene markers among the metagenomes examined. Total ARG relative abundances were highest on vegetables grown in loamy sand receiving antibiotic‐treated beef amendments. The findings emphasize that additional barriers, such as post‐harvest processes, merit further study to minimize potential exposure to consumers.
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