The Atlanta Urban Watershed Harbors Antibiotic Resistant Halotolerant Bacteria
Key Points
This research aims to explore the characteristics of halotolerant bacteria in urban freshwater systems and their implications for public health.
Investigated the Priestia genus in urban aquatic environments
Analyzed traits related to antibiotic resistance and biofilm formation
Assessed the prevalence of opportunistic pathogens
Identified high prevalence of antibiotic resistant halotolerant bacteria
Found that biofilm capability contributes to environmental persistence
Highlighted the presence of a developing environmental resistome
Abstract
The Priestia genus is poorly known in freshwater systems; though the combination of antibiotic resistance, biofilm formation, and spore-forming traits indicate that it has key survival characteristics. Halotolerant bacteria harbor opportunistic human pathogens and a public health risk because the bacteria have a high prevalence of antibiotic resistance and biofilm capability, which contribute to environmental persistence and reservoirs for antibiotic resistance genes. This environmental resistome is a notable and developing characteristic of the urban aquatic microbiome.
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The Atlanta Urban Watershed Harbors Antibiotic Resistant Halotolerant Bacteria | Synapse