| Literature DB >> 35455389 |
Ana Catarina Duarte1,2, Sílvia Rodrigues1,3, Andrea Afonso4, António Nogueira5, Paula Coutinho1,2.
Abstract
Bacterial resistance is a naturally occurring process. However, bacterial antibiotic resistance has emerged as a major public health problem in recent years. The accumulation of antibiotics in the environment, including in wastewaters and drinking water, has contributed to the development of antibiotic resistant bacteria and the dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Such can be justified by the growing consumption of antibiotics and their inadequate elimination. The conventional water treatments are ineffective in promoting the complete elimination of antibiotics and bacteria, mainly in removing ARGs. Therefore, ARGs can be horizontally transferred to other microorganisms within the aquatic environment, thus promoting the dissemination of antibiotic resistance. In this review, we discuss the efficiency of conventional water treatment processes in removing agents that can spread/stimulate the development of antibiotic resistance and the promising strategies for water remediation, mainly those based on nanotechnology and microalgae. Despite the potential of some of these approaches, the elimination of ARGs remains a challenge that requires further research. Moreover, the development of new processes must avoid the release of new contaminants for the environment, such as the chemicals resulting from nanomaterials synthesis, and consider the utilization of green and eco-friendly alternatives such as biogenic nanomaterials and microalgae-based technologies.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic resistance; antibiotic resistance genes; drinking water; microalgae; nanotechnology; water treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35455389 PMCID: PMC9029892 DOI: 10.3390/ph15040393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Schematic representation of antibiotic resistance mechanisms in bacteria. (A). Bacteria might present or acquire mechanisms to disable antibiotics, including alterations on target site, decreased permeability that impairs antibiotics cellular uptake, expression of drug efflux pumps that remove antibiotics from cells, and production of enzymes that modify or degrade antibiotics. (B). Horizontal gene transfer allows the exchange of genetic information between the same or different species by transformation, conjugation, membrane vesicle fusion, transduction, and gene transfer agents mechanisms. ARGs—antibiotic resistance genes, HGT—horizontal gene transfer.
ARGs removal efficiency by current water treatments.
| Antibiotic | ARG | Water Treatment Process | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CO + SE + SF + CL | SF | CL | OZ + CL | OZ | UV | BAC | GAC | MF | Ref | ||
| Aminoglycosides |
| ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | [ | |||||
|
| ND/↓ | ↑ | [ | ||||||||
|
| ↓ | ↑ | |||||||||
|
| ND/↑/↓ | ||||||||||
|
| ↑/↓ | [ | |||||||||
|
| ↑/↓ | ||||||||||
| B-lactams |
| ↓ | ↑ | [ | |||||||
|
| ↑ | [ | |||||||||
|
| ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | [ | ||||||
| Chloramphenicol |
| ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | [ | ||||||
|
| ↑ | [ | |||||||||
|
| ↑ | ||||||||||
| Efflux pump |
| ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | [ | ||||||
|
| ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | [ | ||||||
|
| ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | |||||||
|
| ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | |||||||
| Florfenicol |
| ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | [ | ||||||
| Lincosamides |
| ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | |||||||
| Macrolides |
| ND | [ | ||||||||
|
| ND/↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | [ | ||||||
|
| ↑ | [ | |||||||||
|
| ND | ↓ | [ | ||||||||
|
| ND | ||||||||||
|
| ND | ||||||||||
|
| ND | ||||||||||
|
| ↓ | ↓ | [ | ||||||||
| Polypeptides |
| ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | [ | |||||
| Quinolones |
| ↓ | ND | ↑ | [ | ||||||
|
| ↓ | ND | ↑ | ||||||||
|
| ↑ | ND | ↑ | ↑ | |||||||
|
| ND | ↑ | [ | ||||||||
|
| ND | ↑ | ↑ | ||||||||
| Sulfonamides |
| ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑/↓ | ↑ | ↓/↑ | [ | |
|
| ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | ↓/↑ | [ | |||||
|
| ↓ | [ | |||||||||
| Tetracyclines |
| ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | [ | |
|
| ↑ | ↓ | [ | ||||||||
|
| ↓ | ||||||||||
|
| ↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ↓/↑ | [ | |||||
|
| ND | ↑ | ↓ | [ | |||||||
|
| ↓ | [ | |||||||||
|
| ND/↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | [ | |||||
|
| ND | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | ↓ | [ | |||||
|
| ↓ | ↑ | [ | ||||||||
|
| ND/↑ | ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | ↓/↑ | [ | |||||
|
| ND/↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | ↓/↑ | [ | |||||
BAC—biological activated carbon; CL—chlorination; CO—coagulation; GAC—granular activated carbon; ND—not detected; MF—membrane filtration; OZ—ozonation; SE—sedimentation; SF—sand filtration; UV—ultraviolet; ↑—increased expression; ↓—decreased expression.
Recent promising strategies to efficiently eliminate antibiotics in wastewater and drinking water treatment plants.
| Strategy | Target | Removal Efficiency | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nanomaterials (nanocomposites, nanofibers, NPs) | |||
| TiO2-doped Fe3+ nano-photocatalyst | Metronidazole | 97% (ci = 80 mg/mL, pH 11, 2 h) | [ |
| Graphitized mesoporous carbon TiO2 nanocomposites | Ciprofloxacin | 100% (ci = 1.5 mg/L, 1.5 h) | [ |
| V2O5-ZnO NPs coated carbon nanofibers | Ciprofloxacin | Adsorption of 87.70 mg/g (ci = 10–200 mg/L, pH 6.5, 20 min) | [ |
| Ta3N5 NPs/TiO2 hollow nanosphere composite | Levofloxacin | 93% (2 h); 89.76% after 4 cycles | [ |
| Silver modified ZnO nanoplates | Ofloxacin | 98% (ci = 10 mg/mL, pH 7, 2,30 h) | [ |
| MnO2/graphene nanocomposite | Tetracycline | 99.4% | [ |
| SnO2/Ni@N carbon nanotubes | Cephalexin | >70% (electropersulfate oxidation) | [ |
| Boron Nitride Nanosheets | Tetracycline | Adsorption of 346.66 mg/g, pH 8 | [ |
| Green GS-NiFe beads nanocomposite | Tetracycline | Adsorption/degradation of 487 ± 6.85 mg/g | [ |
| Green bimetallic nZVI-Cu NPs (pomegranate ring extract) | Tetracycline | 72% (ci = 10 mg/L, pH 7) | [ |
| Bentonite supported green nZVI-Cu nanocomposite | 95% (pH 7) | ||
| MnCo2O4 NPs | Ciprofloxacin | 100% (pH 3, 5 h) | [ |
| CdS NPs | 79.50% (ci = 10 mg/mL, pH 9, 80 min) | [ | |
| NiFe2O4 NPs loaded graphitic carbon nitride | Oxytetracycline | 100% (pH 5, 8 h) | [ |
| ZV Cu (core) and Fe3O4 (shell) NPs | Oxytetracycline | >99% (ci = 20 mg/mL, pH3, 10 min) | [ |
| S-doped MgO NPs | Tetracycline | 90% (pH neutral, 10 min) | [ |
| PRB columns packed with ZVI | Tetracycline | 65% | [ |
| PRB columns packed with MnO2 | 50% | ||
| PRB columns packed with ZVI and MnO2 | 85% (pH 6.5, 30 days) | ||
| Fe/Ni bimetallic NPs | Tetracycline | 97.4% (ci = 100 mg/mL, pH 5, 3 h) | [ |
| Microalgae | |||
|
| Cefradine | 37.08% | [ |
|
| Cefradine | 42.63% | |
|
| Sulfonamides | 42–100% (mean 93%) of sulfamerazine, sulfamethoxazole, sulfamonomethoxine | [ |
|
| Macrolides | 9–99% (mean 82%) of trimethoprim, clarithromycin azithromycin, roxithromycin | |
|
| Sulfonamides | 23–98% (mean 78%) | |
|
| Macrolides | 10–100% (mean 47%) | |
|
| Enrofloxacin | 53–73% | [ |
|
| Enrofloxacin | 58–79% | |
|
| cefuroxime sodium | 60% (within 48 h) | [ |
|
| Ofloxacin | 9.95–39.24% | [ |
|
| Ofloxacin | 93% | [ |
| Tetracycline | Adsorption of 61% (120 h; ↓ adsorption along with cycles) | [ | |
|
| Sulfamethazine | 31.4–62.3% (12 days) | [ |
| Trimethoprim | 91.8% | [ | |
|
| Sulfamethoxazole | Biodegradation of 14.9% (11 days) | [ |
| Sulfadiazine | 32.06% (12 days) | [ | |
| Sulfadiazine | 79.2% (1 day) | ||
|
| Tetracycline | 98% (2 days) | [ |
| Ciprofloxacin | 100% (65.05% by biodegradation) | [ | |
| Microalgae-bacteria consortium | Cephalexin | 96.54% (7 days) | [ |
| Sulfamethoxazole | 54.34% (42.86% by biodegradation) | [ | |
NPs—nanoparticles; PRB—permeable reactive barrier; and ZVI—zero-valent iron.
Promising strategies to eliminate ARBs and ARGs in water treatment plants and drinking water distribution systems.
| Strategy | Result | Ref |
|---|---|---|
| Nanotechnology (nanoparticles, nanocomposites, nanofibers) | ||
| GNICPs | ↓ bacterial abundance (↓16S rRNA) | [ |
| Cd2+ and Fe2O3 NPs | ↑ conjugative transfer frequencies | [ |
| Metallic (Cu, Zn, CuO, ZnO) NPs | ↓ bacterial growth | [ |
| nTiO2 NPs | Adsorption of | [ |
| nZVI NPs | Adsorption of | |
| CuO NPs (with humic acid) | ↓ absolute ARGs: | [ |
| CNTs/AG/Ti electrode | ↑ ROS production | [ |
| Water-resistant cellulose foam paper coated with CuO, ZnO, or Ag2O NPs | Enhanced cellulose filter paper antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Melamine foams with Ag NPs | Antibacterial activity against | [ |
| PVDF membrane functionalized with TiO2 NPs | 99.9% retention of tetracycline, chloramphenicol, and sulfadiazine-resistant bacteria | [ |
| Chitosan/biochar-nanosilver (C-Ag) composite | Sustainable antibacterial activity against | [ |
| Carbon-based copper nanocomposites | ↓ absolute ARGs and MGEs | [ |
| SWNTs-PAN/TPU/PANI composite electrospun nanofiber membrane | Complete removal of | [ |
| k-carrageenan/Ag NPs film | Antimicrobial activity against | [ |
| Microalgae | ||
| ↓ 78% ARG absolute abundance | [ | |
| Microalgae-bacteria consortium | ↓ ARGs: | [ |
| ↑ ARG: | [ | |
ARG—antibiotic resistance gene; CAT—catalase; EPS—extracellular polymeric substances; HGT—horizontal gene transference; NPs—nanoparticles; MGE—mobile genetic element; PRB—permeable reactive barrier; ROS—reactive oxygen species; SOD—superoxide dismutase; ZVI—zero-valent iron; ↓—decrease; and ↑—increase.