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Taxonomic variation, plastic degradation, and antibiotic resistance traits of plastisphere communities in the maturation pond of a wastewater treatment plant

Applied and Environmental Microbiology 2024 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hayden Masterton, Sally Gaw Jessica A. Wallbank, Stefan D. M. Maday, Beatrix Theobald, Olga Pantos, Stefan D. M. Maday, Olga Pantos, Gavin Lear, Gavin Lear, Olga Pantos, Robert Abbel, Olga Pantos, Hayden Masterton, Olga Pantos, Robert Abbel, Olga Pantos, Robert Abbel, Olga Pantos, Sally Gaw Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Robert Abbel, Regis Risani, Regis Risani, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Stefan D. M. Maday, Gavin Lear, Robert Abbel, Gavin Lear, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Joanne M. Kingsbury, Olga Pantos, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Louise Weaver, Dawn A. Smith, Dawn A. Smith, Dawn A. Smith, Dawn A. Smith, Dawn A. Smith, Olga Pantos, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Louise Weaver, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Olga Pantos, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Gavin Lear, Robert Abbel, Sally Gaw Olga Pantos, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Stefan D. M. Maday, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Jessica A. Wallbank, Jessica A. Wallbank, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Kim M. Handley, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Fraser Doake, Gavin Lear, Hayden Masterton, Jessica A. Wallbank, Dawn A. Smith, Fraser Doake, Dawn A. Smith, Hayden Masterton, Hayden Masterton, Joanne M. Kingsbury, Fraser Doake, Olga Pantos, Hayden Masterton, Hayden Masterton, Olga Pantos, Gavin Lear, Robert Abbel, Jessica A. Wallbank, Maisie Hopkins, Maisie Hopkins, Maisie Hopkins, Maisie Hopkins, Gavin Lear, Sally Gaw Stefan D. M. Maday, Rosa Dunlop, Olga Pantos, Louise Weaver, Rosa Dunlop, Rosa Dunlop, Rosa Dunlop, Sally Gaw Sally Gaw Beatrix Theobald, Beatrix Theobald, Beatrix Theobald, Dawn A. Smith, Regis Risani, Regis Risani, Regis Risani, Regis Risani, Robert Abbel, Olga Pantos, Robert Abbel, Dawn A. Smith, Kim M. Handley, Fraser Doake, Kim M. Handley, Fraser Doake, Gavin Lear, Hayden Masterton, Olga Pantos, Gavin Lear, Stefan D. M. Maday, Jessica A. Wallbank, Olga Pantos, Robert Abbel, Sally Gaw

Summary

Researchers placed different types of weathered plastics in a wastewater treatment pond for up to a year and studied the microbial communities that grew on them. The study suggests that the bacteria colonizing plastics in wastewater were shaped more by time and water depth than by the type of plastic, and that these communities may carry genes related to plastic degradation and antibiotic resistance.

Study Type Environmental

Wastewater treatment facilities can filter out some plastics before they reach the open environment, yet microplastics often persist throughout these systems. As they age, microplastics in wastewater may both leach and sorb pollutants and fragment to provide an increased surface area for bacterial attachment and conjugation, possibly impacting antimicrobial resistance (AMR) traits. Despite this, little is known about the effects of persistent plastic pollution on microbial functioning. To address this knowledge gap, we deployed five different artificially weathered plastic types and a glass control into the final maturation pond of a municipal wastewater treatment plant in Ōtautahi-Christchurch, Aotearoa/New Zealand. We sampled the plastic-associated biofilms (plastisphere) at 2, 6, 26, and 52 weeks, along with the ambient pond water, at three different depths (20, 40, and 60 cm from the pond water surface). We investigated the changes in plastisphere microbial diversity and functional potential through metagenomic sequencing. Bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA genes composition did not vary among plastic types and glass controls (<i>P</i> = 0.997) but varied among sampling times [permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA), <i>P</i> = 0.001] and depths (PERMANOVA, <i>P</i> = 0.011). Overall, there was no polymer-substrate specificity evident in the total composition of genes (PERMANOVA, <i>P</i> = 0.67), but sampling time (PERMANOVA, <i>P</i> = 0.002) and depth were significant factors (PERMANOVA, <i>P</i> = 0.001). The plastisphere housed diverse AMR gene families, potentially influenced by biofilm-meditated conjugation. The plastisphere also harbored an increased abundance of genes associated with the biodegradation of nylon, or nylon-associated substances, including nylon oligomer-degrading enzymes and hydrolases.IMPORTANCEPlastic pollution is pervasive and ubiquitous. Occurrences of plastics causing entanglement or ingestion, the leaching of toxic additives and persistent organic pollutants from environmental plastics, and their consequences for marine macrofauna are widely reported. However, little is known about the effects of persistent plastic pollution on microbial functioning. Shotgun metagenomics sequencing provides us with the necessary tools to examine broad-scale community functioning to further investigate how plastics influence microbial communities. This study provides insight into the functional consequence of continued exposure to waste plastic by comparing the prokaryotic functional potential of biofilms on five types of plastic [linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE), nylon-6, polyethylene terephthalate, polylactic acid, and oxygen-degradable LLDPE], glass, and ambient pond water over 12 months and at different depths (20, 40, and 60 cm) within a tertiary maturation pond of a municipal wastewater treatment plant.

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