‘Superbugs’ found breeding in China’s sewage plants
December 18, 2013 –
CHINA - Tests at two wastewater treatment plants in northern
China revealed antibiotic-resistant bacteria were not only escaping purification
but also breeding and spreading their dangerous cargo. Joint research by
scientists from Rice, Nankai and Tianjin universities found “superbugs” carrying
New Delhi Metallo-beta-lactamase (NDM-1), a multidrug-resistant gene first
identified in India in 2010, in wastewater disinfected by chlorination. They
found significant levels of NDM-1 in the effluent released to the environment
and even higher levels in dewatered sludge applied to soils. The study, led by
Rice University environmental engineer Pedro Alvarez, appeared this month in the
American Chemical Society journal Environmental Science and Technology Letters.
“It’s scary,” Alvarez said. “There’s no antibiotic that can kill them. We only
realized they exist just a little while ago when a Swedish man got infected in
India, in New Delhi. Now, people are beginning to realize that more and more
tourists trying to go to the upper waters of the Ganges River are getting these
infections that cannot be treated. “We often think about sewage treatment plants
as a way to protect us, to get rid of all of these disease-causing constituents
in wastewater.
But it turns out these microbes are growing.
They’re eating sewage, so they proliferate. In one wastewater treatment plant,
we had four to five of these superbugs coming out for every one that came in.”
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria have been raising alarms for years, particularly
in hospital environments where public health officials fear they can be
transferred from patient to patient and are very difficult to treat. Bacteria
harboring the encoding gene that makes them resistant have been found on every
continent except for Antarctica, the researchers wrote. NDM-1 is able to make
such common bacteria as E. coli, salmonella and K. pneumonias resistant to even
the strongest available antibiotics. The only way to know one is infected is
when symptoms associated with these bacteria fail to respond to antibiotics. In
experiments described in the same paper, Alvarez and his team confirmed the
microbes treated by wastewater plants that still carried the resistant gene
could transfer it via plasmids to otherwise benign bacteria. A subsequent study
by Alvarez and his colleagues published this month in Environmental Science and
Technology defined a method to extract and analyze antibiotic-resistant genes in
extracellular and intracellular DNA from water and sediment and applied it to
sites in the Haihe River basin in China, which drains an area of intensive
antibiotic use. The study showed plasmids persist for weeks in river sediment,
where they can invade indigenous bacteria. “It turns out that they transfer
these genetic determinants for antibiotic resistance to indigenous bacteria in
the environment, so they are not only proliferating within the wastewater
treatment plant, they’re also propagating and dispersing antibiotic resistance,”
Alvarez said. –Terra
Daily
No comments:
Post a Comment