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Silver nanoparticles facilitate phage-borne resistance gene transfer in planktonic and microplastic-attached bacteria

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 17 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Qiurong Zhang, Qiurong Zhang, Qiurong Zhang, Ping Jiang, Huixian Zhou, Huixian Zhou, Qiurong Zhang, Ping Jiang, Lijun Wu Lijun Wu Xiang Xiao, Lijun Wu Lijun Wu Lijun Wu Ping Jiang, Lijun Wu Lijun Wu

Summary

Researchers found that silver nanoparticles, a common pollutant, helped antibiotic resistance genes spread between bacteria more easily, both in open water and on microplastic surfaces. The nanoparticles caused cell membrane damage that made bacteria more vulnerable to infection by virus-like particles carrying resistance genes. This study reveals a concerning three-way interaction between nanoparticles, microplastics, and antibiotic resistance that could accelerate the spread of drug-resistant bacteria in waterways.

The spread of bacteriophage-borne antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) poses a realistic threat to human health. Nanomaterials, as important emerging pollutants, have potential impacts on ARGs dissemination in aquatic environments. However, little is known about its role in transductive transfer of ARGs mediated by bacteriophage in the presence of microplastics. Therefore, this study comprehensively investigated the influence of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) on the transfer of bacteriophage-encoded ARGs in planktonic Escherichia coli and microplastic-attached biofilm. AgNPs exposure facilitated the phage transduction in planktonic and microplastic-attached bacteria at ambient concentration of 0.1 mg/L. Biological binding mediated by phage-specific recognition, rather than physical aggregation conducted by hydrophilicity and ζ-potential, dominated the bacterial adhesion of AgNPs. The aggregated AgNPs in turn resulted in elevated oxidative stress and membrane destabilization, which promoted the bacteriophage infection to planktonic bacteria. AgNPs exposure could disrupt colanic acid biosynthesis and then reduce the thickness of biofilm on microplastics, contributing to the transfer of phage-encoded ARGs. Moreover, the roughness of microplastics also affected the performance of AgNPs on the transductive transfer of ARGs in biofilms. This study reveals the compound risks of nanomaterials and microplastics in phage-borne ARGs dissemination and highlights the complexity in various environmental scenarios.

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