Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Nov 2021)

Revealing the distribution characteristics of antibiotic resistance genes and bacterial communities in animal-aerosol-human in a chicken farm: From One-Health perspective

  • Fan Yang,
  • Yanling Gao,
  • Hongcheng Zhao,
  • Jinlei Li,
  • Xuemin Cheng,
  • Lei Meng,
  • Peng Dong,
  • Haiyan Yang,
  • Shuaiyin Chen,
  • Jingyuan Zhu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 224
p. 112687

Abstract

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Antibiotics in breeding industry can enter the environment through multiple pathways, thus accelerating the emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), among which aerosol transmission is easily achieved and often overlooked. To elucidate the role of aerosols in this situation, the present study investigated the distribution characteristics of 107 ARG subtypes (targeting to eight different ARG types) and nine mobile genetic elements (MGEs) and bacterial community in animal (chicken cloaca), environment (aerosols) and human (nasopharynx) of a chicken farm (n = 42) in Henan Province. In total, 116 ARG subtypes and MGEs were identified in the poultry farm. The total bacterial concentration of aerosols inside the chicken house (3.117 × 104 CFU/m3) exceeded the corresponding limit. The microbial communities in the samples of cloaca swab (C) and the workers’ nasopharyngeal swab (N) were closer, while the abundance distribution of ARGs/ MGEs in cloacal swab (C) and aerosol (AI) in chicken house were much similar. There were certain consistency of the microbial community structure and the distribution of ARGs among the three groups of chicken cloaca, air aerosol, and workers’ nasopharynx. Our results highlighted that animal breeding does have a certain impact on the surrounding environment and human, and aerosols play an important role in this process.

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