Bacterial community assembly and antibiotic resistance genes in soils exposed to antibiotics at environmentally relevant concentrations

Author:

Chen Zeyou12ORCID,Zhang Wei2,Peng Anping3,Shen Yike2,Jin Xin4,Stedtfeld Robert D.5,Boyd Stephen A.2,Teppen Brian J.2,Tiedje James M.2,Gu Cheng4,Zhu Dongqiang6,Luo Yi1,Li Hui2

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Pollution Processes and Environmental Criteria, College of Environmental Science and Engineering Nankai University Tianjin 300071 China

2. Department of Plant, Soil and Microbial Sciences Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan 48824 USA

3. School of Environmental and Municipal Engineering Tianjin Chengjian University Tianjin 300384 China

4. State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the Environment Nanjing University Nanjing 210093 China

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan 48824 USA

6. School of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing 100871 China

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding how bacterial community assembly and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) respond to antibiotic exposure is essential to deciphering the ecological risk of anthropogenic antibiotic pollution in soils. In this study, three loam soils with different land management (unmanured golf course, dairy‐manured pasture, and swine‐manured cornfield) were spiked with a mixture of 11 antibiotics at the initial concentration of 100 and 1000 μg kg−1 for each antibiotic and incubated over 132 days, mimicking a scenario of pulse disturbance and recovery in soils, with unspiked soil samples as the control treatment. The Infer Community Assembly Mechanisms by Phylogenetic‐bin‐based null model (iCAMP) analysis demonstrated that drift and dispersal limitation contributed to 57%–65% and 16%–25%, and homogeneous selection 12%–16% of soil bacterial community assembly. Interestingly, antibiotic exposure to 1000 μg kg−1 level significantly increased the contribution of drift to community assembly, largely due to the positive response from Acidobacteria‐6 in the golf course and pasture soils and from Chthoniobacteraceae in the cornfield soil to the antibiotic exposure. However, ARG abundance and diversity in the three soils exhibited antibiotics‐independent temporal fluctuations, but were associated with the changes in soil bacterial communities over time. This study provides the first insight into the relative contributions of different bacterial community assembly processes in soils upon antibiotic exposure at environmentally relevant concentrations.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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