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Study of antibiotic resistance in freshwater ecosystems with low anthropogenic impact

TitoloStudy of antibiotic resistance in freshwater ecosystems with low anthropogenic impact
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2023
AutoriNavarro, A., Sanseverino I., Cappelli F., Lahm A., Niegowska M., Fabbri M., Paracchini V., Petrillo M., Skejo H., Valsecchi S., Pedraccini R., Guglielmetti S., Frattini S., Villani Maria Gabriella, and Lettieri T.
RivistaScience of the Total Environment
Volume857
ISSN00489697
Parole chiaveAnthropogenic impacts, Antibiotic resistance gene, Antibiotic resistance genes, Antibiotics, Antibiotics resistance, Bacteria, Bacterial diversity, Ecosystems, fresh water, Freshwater ecosystem, Genes, Macrolides, Natural bacterial, Resistant bacteria, Rivers, Water
Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the bacterial diversity and the background level of antibiotic resistance in two freshwater ecosystems with low anthropogenic impact in order to evaluate the presence of natural antimicrobial resistance in these areas and its potential to spread downstream. Water samples from a pre-Alpine and an Apennine river (Variola and Tiber, respectively) were collected in three different sampling campaigns and bacterial diversity was assessed by 16S sequencing, while the presence of bacteria resistant to five antibiotics was screened using a culturable approach. Overall bacterial load was higher in the Tiber River compared with the Variola River. Furthermore, the study revealed the presence of resistant bacteria, especially the Tiber River showed, for each sampling, the presence of resistance to all antibiotics tested, while for the Variola River, the detected resistance was variable, comprising two or more antibiotics. Screening of two resistance genes on a total of one hundred eighteen bacterial isolates from the two rivers showed that blaTEM, conferring resistance to β-lactam antibiotics, was dominant and present in 58 % of isolates compared to only 9 % for mefA/E conferring resistance to macrolides. Moreover, β-lactam resistance was detected in various isolates showing also resistance to additional antibiotics such as macrolides, aminoglycosides and tetracyclines. These observations would suggest the presence of co-resistant bacteria even in non-anthropogenic environments and this resistance may spread from the environment to humans and/or animals. © 2022 The Authors

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85140317595&doi=10.1016%2fj.scitotenv.2022.159378&partnerID=40&md5=0e3328a22191fc6e87470e87868a9bea
DOI10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159378
Citation KeyNavarro2023