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Swine liquid manure: a hotspot of mobile genetic elements and antibiotic resistance genes.


ABSTRACT: The overuse or abuse of antibiotics as veterinary medicine and growth promoters accelerates antibiotic resistance, creating a serious threat to public health in the world. Swine liquid manure as an important reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) has received much attention, but little information is known regarding the occurrence, persistence and fate of ARGs-associated mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in swine farms, especially their change patterns and removal in full-scale piggery wastewater treatment systems (PWWTSs). In this study, we searched the presence and distribution of MGEs and associated ARGs in swine farms, and addressed their fate and seasonal variation in full-scale PWWTSs by real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR). Our results revealed class 1 integrons, class 2 integrons and conjugative plasmids were prevalent in pig feces and piggery wastewater. A clear pattern of these MGE levels in swine liquid manure was also observed, i.e., intI1?>?intI2?>?traA (p?

SUBMITTER: Yang F 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7490410 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Swine liquid manure: a hotspot of mobile genetic elements and antibiotic resistance genes.

Yang Fengxia F   Han Bingjun B   Gu Yanru Y   Zhang Keqiang K  

Scientific reports 20200914 1


The overuse or abuse of antibiotics as veterinary medicine and growth promoters accelerates antibiotic resistance, creating a serious threat to public health in the world. Swine liquid manure as an important reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) has received much attention, but little information is known regarding the occurrence, persistence and fate of ARGs-associated mobile genetic elements (MGEs) in swine farms, especially their change patterns and removal in full-scale piggery was  ...[more]

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