The role of wastewater in surveillance and emergence of antibiotic resistant bacteria
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Date
2021-05-25
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Abstract
As antibiotic resistance spreads among bacterial pathogens, it reduces treatment
options and increases treatment failures of infectious diseases. Strategies
employed to reduce this spread or adapt to its consequences need to be based
on reliable surveillance data which is lacking in many countries, often due to
limited resources. Wastewater contains pooled excreted bacteria, including
common pathogens such as Escherichia coli, from the population connected to
the sewers. Hence, analysis of wastewater has the potential to be used as a
resource-efficient surveillance system for antibiotic resistance. In the sewers,
human-associated bacteria are also mixed with environmental bacteria and
exposed to many substances known to induce horizontal gene transfer (HGT), a
major driver for the acquisition of antibiotic resistance in bacteria. The studies
presented in this thesis aimed to develop and assess several ways in which the
analysis of wastewater samples could be used to provide clinically relevant
antibiotic resistance data and evaluate the effects of wastewater on HGT.
The resistance rates of E. coli from wastewaters were determined. Additionally,
the abundance of different carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales (CPE)
and antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) were quantified in wastewater. Resistance
rates in wastewater E. coli were strongly correlated with resistance rates in clinical
isolates and the detection of CPE in wastewater was coherent with the detection
of similar CPE in the contributing population. The concentrations of some
carbapenemase genes (namely blaOXA-48, blaNDM and blaKPC) were in accordance
with the occurrence of CPE carrying those genes in wastewater. Further, a rise of
blaOXA-48 in wastewater preceded detection of corresponding CPE in patients,
indicating that monitoring of ARGs in wastewater could serve as an early warning
system. Hence, it is noteworthy that many ARGs of emerging concern (cfr, optrA,
mcr-1, mcr-3, mcr-4, mcr-5, sul4 and gar), which have almost never been detected
in Swedish clinical samples, were detected regularly in wastewater.
A HGT assay, where a recipient strain was mixed with a complex donor bacterial
community, was used to measure the rate of acquisition of ARGs in the presence
of wastewater. Municipal wastewater had no detectable effect on HGT but
exposure to hospital wastewater could promote antibiotic resistance.
Overall, this thesis provides evidence supporting the use of antibiotic resistance
data from wastewater analyses as a valuable complement to traditional clinical
surveillance. Additionally, the thesis highlights a possible role of hospital
wastewater in the emergence of antibiotic resistant bacteria.
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Keywords
Microbiology, Bacteriology, Antibiotic resistance, Surveillance, Horizontal gene transfer, HGT, Conjugation, Plasmids, Epidemiology, CPE, E. coli, Carbapenamase, Linezolid, Colistin, Selection, sul4, OXA-48, gar, NDM, mcr, wastewater, sewage, sewer