4.8 Article

Combined effects of composting and antibiotic administration on cattle manure-borne antibiotic resistance genes

Journal

MICROBIOME
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40168-021-01006-z

Keywords

Compost; Microbial community Succession; Thermophilic stress; Selection pressure; Antibiotic resistance

Categories

Funding

  1. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture competitive grants [2015-68003-23050, 2017-68003-26498]
  2. Virginia Tech Advanced Research Computing
  3. Virginia Tech ICTAS Center for Science and Engineering of the Exposome
  4. NIFA [914814, 2017-68003-26498] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Research revealed that bacterial microbiota succession during composting was the main driver of resistome composition, with a reduction in total antibiotic resistance genes noted in finished compost across different antibiotic management conditions. External heating was more effective in reducing certain clinically relevant antibiotic resistance genes and resistome risk, indicating the importance of additional mitigation measures in composting practices.
Background: Research is needed to delineate the relative and combined effects of different antibiotic administration and manure management practices in either amplifying or attenuating the potential for antibiotic resistance to spread. Here, we carried out a comprehensive parallel examination of the effects of small-scale (> 55 degrees C x 3 days) static and turned composting of manures from dairy and beef cattle collected during standard antibiotic administration (cephapirin/pirlimycin or sulfamethazine/chlortetracycline/tylosin, respectively), versus from untreated cattle, on resistomes (total antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) determined via shotgun metagenomic sequencing), bacterial microbiota, and indicator ARGs enumerated via quantitative polymerase chain reaction. To gain insight into the role of the thermophilic phase, compost was also externally heated to > 55 degrees C x 15 days. Results: Progression of composting with time and succession of the corresponding bacterial microbiota was the overarching driver of the resistome composition (ANOSIM; R = 0.424, p = 0.001, respectively) in all composts at the small-scale. Reduction in relative abundance (16S rRNA gene normalized) of total ARGs in finished compost (day 42) versus day 0 was noted across all conditions (ANOSIM; R = 0.728, p = 0.001), except when externally heated. Sul1, intI1, beta-lactam ARGs, and plasmid-associated genes increased in all finished composts as compared with the initial condition. External heating more effectively reduced certain clinically relevant ARGs (bla(OXA), bla(CARB)), fecal coliforms, and resistome risk scores, which take into account putative pathogen annotations. When manure was collected during antibiotic administration, taxonomic composition of the compost was distinct according to nonmetric multidimensional analysis and tet(W) decayed faster in the dairy manure with antibiotic condition and slower in the beef manure with antibiotic condition. Conclusions: This comprehensive, integrated study revealed that composting had a dominant effect on corresponding resistome composition, while little difference was noted as a function of collecting manure during antibiotic administration. Reduction in total ARGs, tet(W), and resistome risk suggested that composting reduced some potential for antibiotic resistance to spread, but the increase and persistence of other indicators of antibiotic resistance were concerning. Results indicate that composting guidelines intended for pathogen reduction do not necessarily provide a comprehensive barrier to ARGs or their mobility prior to land application and additional mitigation measures should be considered.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available