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Application of Nucleotide-Based Kinetic Modeling Approaches to Predict Antibiotic Resistance Gene Degradation During UV- and Chlorine-Based Wastewater Disinfection Processes: From Bench- to Full-Scale

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Date 2022 Sep 13
PMID 36098629
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Abstract

This study investigated antibiotic resistance gene (ARG) degradation kinetics in wastewaters during bench- and full-scale treatment with UV light and chlorine─with the latter maintained as free available chlorine (FAC) in low-ammonia wastewater and converted into monochloramine (NHCl) in high-ammonia wastewater. Twenty-three 142-1509 bp segments (i.e., amplicons) of seven ARGs (, , A, (A), C, , ) and the 16S rRNA gene from antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) strains , , , , , and were monitored as disinfection targets by qPCR. Rate constants for ARG and 16S rRNA gene amplicon degradation by UV, FAC, and NHCl were measured in phosphate buffer and used to expand and validate several recently developed approaches to predict DNA segment degradation rate constants based solely on their nucleotide contents, which were then applied to model ARG degradation during bench-scale treatment in buffer and wastewater matrixes. Kinetics of extracellular and intracellular ARG degradation by UV and FAC were well predicted up to ∼1-2-log elimination, although with decreasing accuracy at higher levels for intracellular genes, while NHCl yielded minimal degradation under all conditions (agreeing with predictions). ARB inactivation kinetics varied substantially across strains, with intracellular gene degradation lagging cell inactivation in each case. ARG degradation levels observed during full-scale disinfection at two wastewater treatment facilities were consistent with bench-scale measurements and predictions, where UV provided ∼1-log ARG degradation, and chlorination of high-ammonia wastewater (dominated by NHCl) yielded minimal ARG degradation.

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