Science of the Total Environment 2018-04-05

Tetracycline resistance gene tet(M) of a marine bacterial strain is not accumulated in bivalves from seawater in clam tank experiment and mussel monitoring

Satoru Suzuki, Naoki Makihara, Aya Kadoya

Index: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.03.305

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Abstract

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.03.305 picture

Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are found in marine as well as terrestrial bacteria. Bivalves are known to accumulate chemical pollutants and pathogenic microbes, however, the fate of ARGs in bivalves after the intake of ARG-possessing bacteria is not known. Here we show that the copy number of oxytetracycline resistance gene tet(M) increased rapidly in the clam digestive tract by filtering water, then remained constant over 96 h in a tank experiment even with the addition of tet(M)-possessing bacteria every 24 h. >99.9% of the added tet(M) was decomposed, reaching a balanced state. Environmental sampling of mussel digestive tract and seawater supported the hypothesis that tet(M) was decomposed in bivalves as tet(M) was present in seawater from April to October at a concentration of 10−5 to 10−6 copies/16S, whereas tet(M) in mussels was mostly below the detection limit. Two (April) and three (July and October) individual mussels were positive for tet(M) with a concentration equivalent to that of seawater. We therefore conclude that bivalves do not accumulate tet(M) from seawater.