Post-digestate composting shifts microbial composition and degrades antimicrobial resistance genes
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2021
Abstract:
Post-digestate treatments may reduce the risk linked to Antibiotic Resistant Genes (ARGs) release with digestate
direct land application. Thus, this study aimed to evaluate post-digestate composting and co-composting with
biogas production feedstock (maize silage, food processing waste, and poultry litter) effect on abundance of
selected ARGs: erm(B), tet(K), tet(M), tet(O), and tet(S) genes. More than 80% of all ARGs were removed after 90
days of composting but removals from co-composting were lower. Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria
dominated fresh digestate, and a network analysis indicated that these were potential hosts of ARGs. The
emergence of Actinobacteria (dominant), Planctomycetes, and Verrucomicrobia phyla during composting shifted
the microbial composition. Moreover, canonical correspondence analysis showed trace elements explaining 90%
variations in ARGs abundance. The study illustrates significance of post-digestate composting in mitigating ARGs
release, and effectiveness could be linked to shift in microbial composition and trace elements release.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
Gurmessa, Biyensa; Milanovic, Vesna; Foppa Pedretti, Ester; Corti, Giuseppe; Ashworth, Amanda J.; Aquilanti, Lucia; Ferrocino, Ilario; Rita Corvaglia, Maria; Cocco, Stefania
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