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Mechanisms of inhibition and recovery under multi-antibiotic stress in anammox: A critical review

Journal of Environmental Management 2024 8 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Ji Xu, Xiaonong Zhang, Ting Ju, Li Zhou, Li Zhou, Da Jin, Peng Wu

Summary

This review examines how antibiotics, alongside other emerging pollutants like microplastics and nanomaterials, inhibit the anammox process used in wastewater treatment for nitrogen removal. The researchers detail multiple mechanisms by which antibiotics disrupt these specialized bacteria, including damage to cell membranes, enzyme inhibition, and interference with key metabolic pathways. Understanding these mechanisms is important for developing strategies to maintain effective wastewater treatment in the face of increasing antibiotic contamination.

Study Type Environmental

With the escalating global concern for emerging pollutants, particularly antibiotics, microplastics, and nanomaterials, the potential disruption they pose to critical environmental processes like anaerobic ammonia oxidation (anammox) has become a pressing issue. The anammox process, which plays a crucial role in nitrogen removal from wastewater, is particularly sensitive to external pollutants. This paper endeavors to address this knowledge gap by providing a comprehensive overview of the inhibition mechanisms of multi-antibiotic on anaerobic ammonia-oxidizing bacteria, along with insights into their recovery processes. The paper dives deeply into the various ways antibiotics interact with anammox bacteria, focusing specifically on their interference with the bacteria's extracellular polymers (EPS) - crucial components that maintain the structural integrity and functionality of the cells. Additionally, it explores how anammox bacteria utilize quorum sensing (QS) mechanisms to regulate their community structure and respond to antibiotic stress. Moreover, the paper summarizes effective removal methods for these antibiotics from wastewater systems, which is crucial for mitigating their inhibitory effects on anammox bacteria. Finally, the paper offers valuable insights into how anammox communities can recuperate from multi-antibiotic stress. This includes strategies for reintroducing healthy bacteria, optimizing operational conditions, and using bioaugmentation techniques to enhance the resilience of anammox communities. In summary, this paper not only enriches our understanding of the complex interactions between antibiotics and anammox bacteria but also provides theoretical and practical guidance for the treatment of antibiotic pollution in sewage, ensuring the sustainability and effectiveness of wastewater treatment processes.

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