Fluoroquinolones and qnr genes in sediment, well water, soil and human fecal flora in an Indian environment polluted by drug manufacturing
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2014

There is increasing concern that environmental antibiotic pollution promotes transfer of resistance genes to the human microbiota. Here, fluoroquinolone-polluted river sediment, well water, irrigated farmland, and human fecal flora of local villagers within a pharmaceutical industrial region in India were analyzed for quinolone resistance (qnr) genes by quantitative PCR. Similar samples from Indian villages farther away from industrial areas, as well as fecal samples from Swedish study participants and river sediment from Sweden, were included for comparison. Fluoroquinolones were detected by MS/MS in well water and soil from all villages located within three km from industrially polluted waterways. Quinolone resistance genes were detected in 42% of well water, 7% of soil samples and in 100% and 18% of Indian and Swedish river sediments, respectively. High antibiotic concentrations in Indian sediment coincided with high abundances of qnr, whereas lower fluoroquinolone levels in well water and soil did not. We could not find support for an enrichment of qnr in fecal samples from people living in the fluoroquinolone-contaminated villages. However, as qnr was detected in 91% of all Indian fecal samples (24% of the Swedish) it suggests that the spread of qnr between people is currently a dominating transmission route.

Författare

Carolin Rutgersson

Göteborgs universitet

Jerker Fick

Umeå universitet

Nachiket Marathe

Göteborgs universitet

Erik Kristiansson

Göteborgs universitet

Chalmers, Matematiska vetenskaper, Matematisk statistik

Anders Janzon

Göteborgs universitet

Martin Angelin

Umeå universitet

Anders Johansson

Umeå universitet

Yogesh S Shouche

National Centre for Cell Science India

Carl-Fredrik Flach

Göteborgs universitet

D. G. Joakim Larsson

Göteborgs universitet

Environmental Science & Technology

0013-936X (ISSN) 1520-5851 (eISSN)

Vol. 48 14 7825−7832-7832

Ämneskategorier

Biologiska vetenskaper

Mikrobiologi

DOI

10.1021/es501452a

PubMed

24988042

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2022-04-06