| Literature DB >> 35625274 |
Micaela Oliveira1,2, Inês Carvalho Leonardo1,2, Ana Filipa Silva3, João Goulão Crespo4, Mónica Nunes1,2, Maria Teresa Barreto Crespo1,2.
Abstract
Wastewater reuse for agricultural irrigation still raises important public health issues regarding its safety, due to the increasing presence of emerging contaminants, such as antibiotic resistant bacteria and genes, in the treated effluents. In this paper, the potential for a commercial Desal 5 DK nanofiltration membrane to be used as a tertiary treatment in the wastewater treatment plants for a more effective elimination of these pollutants from the produced effluents was assessed on laboratory scale, using a stainless steel cross-flow cell. The obtained results showed high concentrations of total bacteria and target carbapenem and (fluoro)quinolone resistance genes (blaKPC, blaOXA-48, blaNDM, blaIMP, blaVIM, qnrA, qnrB and qnrS) not only in the discharged, but also in the reused, effluent samples, which suggests that their use may not be entirely safe. Nevertheless, the applied nanofiltration treatment achieved removal rates superior to 98% for the total bacteria and 99.99% for all the target resistance genes present in both DNA and extracellular DNA fractions, with no significant differences for these microbiological parameters between the nanofiltered and the control tap water samples. Although additional studies are still needed to fully optimize the entire process, the use of nanofiltration membranes seems to be a promising solution to substantially increase the quality of the treated wastewater effluents.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic resistance; carbapenem and (fluoro)quinolone resistance; nanofiltration; tertiary wastewater treatments; wastewater reuse
Year: 2022 PMID: 35625274 PMCID: PMC9137456 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11050630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Concentrations of total—live and dead—bacteria in the discharged effluent, reused effluent, nanofiltered water and tap water samples. Values are expressed in cells per milliliter and correspond to the mean ± standard deviation of biological and technical triplicates.
Figure 2Concentrations of the target carbapenem and (fluoro)quinolone resistance genes in the DNA extracted from the discharged effluent, reused effluent, nanofiltered water and tap water samples. Values are expressed in gene copy numbers per milliliter and correspond to the mean ± standard deviation of biological and technical triplicates.
Figure 3Concentrations of the target carbapenem and (fluoro)quinolone resistance genes in the eDNA precipitated and purified from the discharged effluent, reused effluent, nanofiltered water and tap water samples. Values are expressed in gene copy numbers per milliliter and correspond to the mean ± standard deviation of biological and technical triplicates.
Figure 4Schematic representation of the cross-flow nanofiltration system used in this study. PT: pressure transducer.