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Antibiotic resistome mostly relates to bacterial taxonomy along a suburban transmission chain
Authors:Ziyan Qin  Qun Gao  Qiang Dong  Joy D Van Nostrand  Qi Qi  Yifan Su  Suo Liu  Tianjiao Dai  Jingmin Cheng  Jizhong Zhou  Yunfeng Yang
Abstract: ? The α-diversities of resistome were lower in manure and compost than in soils. ? There were significant correlations between the resistome and bacterial taxonomy. ? Bacterial taxonomy was the highest in explaining resistome variances. Antibiotic resistance genes comprising antibiotic resistome are of great concern due to their increase in the environment. Recent evidence of shared resistomes between soils and animal husbandry has imposed potential risks to human health. However, the correlation between a given community’s resistome and bacterial taxonomic composition is controversial. Here, a transmission chain of resistomes from swine manure to compost and compost-amended soil were analyzed in five suburban areas of Beijing, China, with unamended agricultural soils as control soils. Antibiotic resistomes and bacterial taxonomic compositions were distinct between (I) manure and compost; and (II) compost-amended and control soils. In manure, compost, and compost-amended soils, the β-diversity of the resistome and bacterial taxonomic composition was significantly correlated, while no correlation was detected in control soils. Bacterial taxonomic composition explained 36.0% of total variations of the resistome composition, much higher than environmental factors. Together, those results demonstrated that antibiotic resistome was closely related to bacterial taxonomic composition along the suburban transmission chain.
Keywords:Antibiotic resistance genes  Resistome  Bacterial taxonomy  Transmission chain  
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