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Tetracycline Induces the Formation of Biofilm of Bacteria from Different Phases of Wastewater Treatment

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2020

Abstract

The study monitored the effect of tetracycline on bacterial biofilm formation and compared biofilm formation by resistant bacterial strains in different phases of the wastewater treatment process in wastewater treatment plant (WWTP). The crystal violet staining method was used to evaluate the biofilm formation.

Biofilm-related bacterial properties were characterized by hydrophobicity, autoaggregation and motility tests. The relative abundance of tetracycline resistance genes (tetW,tetM,tetO,tetA andtetB) in wastewaters were subsequently quantified using qPCR.

The results show that the isolates from the nitrification tank produce biofilm with up to 10 times greater intensity relative to the isolates from the sedimentation tank. In isolates ofAeromonassp. from the nitrification tank, increased biofilm production in the occurrence of tetracycline from a concentration of 0.03125 mu g/mL was observed.

ThetetW gene showed the highest relative abundance out of all the tested genes. From the sampling points, its abundance was the highest in the sedimentation tank of the WWTP.

Based on these results, it can be assumed that resistant bacteria are able to form a biofilm and sub-inhibitory tetracycline concentrations induce biofilm formation. WWTPs thus represent a reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes and contribute to the spread of resistance in the natural environment.