| Literature DB >> 35625208 |
Martins A Adefisoye1, Ademola O Olaniran1.
Abstract
Chemical agents including chlorine and antibiotics are used extensively to control infectious microorganisms. While antibiotics are mainly used to treat bacterial infections, chlorine is widely used for microbial inactivation in the post-secondary disinfection steps of water treatment. The extensive use of these agents has been acknowledged as a driving force for the expansion of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) and has prompted discourse on their roles in the evolution and proliferation of resistant pathogens in the aquatic milieus. We live in a possible "post-antibiotic" era when resistant microbes spread at startling levels with dire predictions relating to a potential lack of effective therapeutic antibacterial drugs. There have been reports of enhancement of resistance among some waterborne pathogens due to chlorination. In this context, it is pertinent to investigate the various factors and mechanisms underlying the emergence and spread of resistance and the possible association between chlorination and AMR. We, therefore, reflect on the specifics of bacterial resistance development, the mechanisms of intrinsic and acquired resistance with emphasis on their environmental and public health implications, the co-selection for antibiotic resistance due to chlorination, biofilm microbiology, and multidrug efflux activity. In-depth knowledge of the molecular basis of resistance development in bacteria will significantly contribute to the more rational utilization of these biocidal agents and aid in filling identified knowledge gap toward curbing resistance expansion.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial resistance (AMR); chlorination; mutant selection window (MSW); public health; resistance mechanisms; waterborne pathogens
Year: 2022 PMID: 35625208 PMCID: PMC9137585 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11050564
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Schematic illustration of chlorine disinfection.
Figure 2Graphical representation of breakpoint chlorination.
Figure 3Schematic presentation of the possible events cascade of chlorine disinfection leading to microbial cell death. 1: Dissociating chlorine molecules attack and destroy bacterial cell walls altering permeability; 2: Entry of chlorine molecules into the cytoplasm interfering with biomolecules and enzymatic reactions; 3: Altered permeability causes vital cellular components leakage; 4: The series of events lead to the loss of cellular constituents and functions; 5: The loss of cellular constituents and function lead to eventual cell death.
Summary of some reports of disinfectant-resistant microbes isolated from diverse aquatic sources.
| Source | Microorganism | Disinfectant Concentration/Time | Mechanism(s) of Resistance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drinking water |
| ≤0.5 mg/L Cl− | Natural resistance due to the permeability barrier caused by outer membrane lipopolysaccharides; biofilm formation | [ |
| Experimental isolates |
| 0.2–4 mg/L | Increased expression of efflux pumps other antibiotic resistance genes | [ |
| Drinking water reservoir | 2 mg/L | Not determined | [ | |
| Sewage | 0.1 mg/L NaOCl | Probable spore formation | [ | |
| Secondary effluent | 0.5 mg/L Ca(OCl)2 for 30 min | Not determined | [ | |
| Drinking water | 10 mg/L NaOCl for 2 min | Cellular aggregation or adhesion to suspended particulate. Production of extracellular slime or capsular material | [ | |
| Drinking water and experimental isolates | Heterotrophic bacteria, faecal coliforms, | 2.0 mg/L free chlorine for 1 h | Bacterial attachment to surface and production of extracellular slime layer | [ |
| Chlorine-demand–free buffer solution | Coliform isolated from drinking water systems and Enteric bacterial from culture collections cocultured with protozoa (Ciliates and amoebae). | 2–4 mg/L free chlorine for 1–2 h | Shielding of bacteria from chlorine by ingesting protozoans (cysts) and, thus, enhancing resistance | [ |
| Treated drinking water | 1–100 mg/L Ca(OCl)2 solution for 30 min | Possible synthesis of unique proteins or aggregation of bacteria or encapsulation | [ | |
| Environmental isolates (Wastewater clarifier effluent) suspended in phosphate buffer saline | 0.5 mg/L Ca(OCl)2 for 30 min | Not determined | [ | |
| Environmental strains cultured in sterile phosphate buffer solution | 2–3 mg/L Cl2 for 1 h with a residual Cl2 of 1 mg/L after 1 h | Possible phenotypic modification of | [ | |
| Environmental isolates from wastewater treatment plants suspended in saline | 0.5 mg/L NaOCl for 30 min | Authors suggested the possible expression of certain stress factor genes which may reduce bacterial metabolism or change the permeability of cell membranes | [ | |
| Environmental isolates (Wastewater clarifier effluent) suspended in phosphate buffer saline |
| 0.5 mg/L NaOCl for 30 min | Not determined | [ |
Figure 4Schematic illustration of different phases in biofilm microbiology.
Figure 5Different classes of efflux systems.