saneamento basico

Presença de bactérias resistentes a antibióticos em Estações de Tratamento de Esgoto

Estudo realizado pela faculdade de medicina da Universidade de Washington em St. Louis e publicado pela revista Nature, apontou a existência de bactérias com potencial capacidade de resistir a antibióticos em zonas ruais de El Salvador e densas favelas em Lima, no Peru. Bactérias resistentes a antibióticos são frequentemente associadas com hospitais e outros centros de saúde, mas neste estudo foi observada a presença de bactérias resistentes a antibióticos em galinheiros e estações de tratamento de esgoto onde estas bactérias conseguem misturar e compartilhar seus genes.

Veja mais informações e acesso ao estudo na publicação: PHYS.ORG

Antibiotic-​resistant ​bacteria most ​often are ​associated with ​hospitals and ​other health-​care settings, ​but a new study ​indicates that ​chicken coops ​and sewage ​treatment ​plants also are ​hot spots of ​antibiotic ​resistance. ​

A slum in Lima, Peru. The research, ​led by a team ​at Washington ​University ​School of ​Medicine in St. ​Louis, is ​published May ​12 in Nature. ​

The ​scientists ​surveyed ​bacteria and ​their capacity ​to resist ​antibiotics in ​a rural village ​in El Salvador ​and a densely ​populated slum ​on the ​outskirts of ​Lima, Peru. In ​both communities,​ the researchers ​identified ​areas ripe for ​bacteria to ​shuffle and ​share their ​resistance ​genes. These ​hot spots of ​potential ​resistance ​transmission ​included ​chicken coops ​in the rural ​village and a ​modern ​wastewater ​treatment plant ​outside Lima. ​

“​Bacteria can do ​this weird ​thing that we ​can’t ​— ​exchange DNA ​directly ​between ​unrelated ​organisms,​” said ​senior author ​Gautam Dantas, ​associate ​professor of ​pathology and ​immunology. ​“That ​means it’​s relatively ​easy for ​disease-causing ​bacteria that ​are treatable ​with antibiotics ​to become ​resistant to ​those ​antibiotics ​quickly. If ​these bacteria ​happen to come ​into contact ​with other ​microbes that ​carry ​resistance ​genes, those ​genes can pop ​over in one ​step. We ​estimate that ​such gene-​transfer events ​are generally ​rare, but they ​are more likely ​to occur in ​these hot spots ​we identified.​” ​

While the ​study was done ​in developing ​parts of the ​world, Dantas ​suggested ways ​the data could ​be relevant for ​the U.S. and ​other ​industrialized ​countries. If ​the chicken ​coops of ​subsistence ​farmers are hot ​spots of ​resistance gene ​transfer, he ​speculated that ​bacteria ​present in ​industrial ​farming ​operations ​— where ​chickens ​regularly ​receive ​antibiotics ​— would ​see even more ​pressure to ​share ​resistance ​genes. Dantas ​expressed ​concern about ​such bacteria ​getting into ​the food system.​ Further, the ​wastewater ​treatment ​facility the ​investigators ​studied in Lima ​is a modern ​design that ​uses technologies ​typical of such ​facilities ​around the ​world, ​including those ​in the U.S., ​suggesting ​these plants ​may be hot ​spots of ​antibiotic ​resistance ​transmission ​regardless of ​their locations.​

The study is ​the first to ​survey the ​landscape of ​bacteria and ​the genetics of ​their ​resistance ​across multiple ​aspects of an ​environment, ​including the ​people, their ​animals, the ​water supply, ​the surrounding ​soil, and ​samples from ​the sanitation ​facilities. ​While the ​densely ​populated slum ​surrounding ​Lima has a ​districtwide ​sewage system ​and modern ​wastewater ​treatment plant,​ the village in ​El Salvador has ​composting ​latrines. ​

Rural ​villagers who ​rely on ​subsistence ​farming, and ​residents of ​densely ​populated, low-​income ​communities ​surrounding ​cities make up ​a majority of ​the global ​population; yet ​their ​microbiomes are ​largely ​unstudied. Most ​similar studies ​to date have ​focused on ​heavily ​industrialized ​populations in ​the United ​States and ​Europe and on ​rare and so-​called pristine ​communities of ​people living a ​traditional ​hunter-gatherer ​lifestyle. ​

“Not ​only do the ​communities in ​our study serve ​as models for ​how most people ​live, they also ​represent areas ​of highest ​antibiotic use,​” Dantas ​said. “​Access to these ​drugs is over-​the-counter in ​many low-income ​countries. ​Since no ​prescription is ​required, we ​expect ​antibiotic use ​in these areas ​to be high, ​putting ​similarly high ​pressure on ​bacteria to ​develop ​resistance to ​these drugs.​” ​

In general, ​Dantas and his ​colleagues ​found that ​resistance ​genes are ​similar among ​bacteria living ​in similar ​environments, ​with more ​genetic ​similarity seen ​between ​bacteria in the ​human gut and ​animal guts ​than between ​the human gut ​and the soil, ​for example. In ​addition, the ​researchers ​also found that ​bacteria that ​are closely ​related to one ​another have ​similar ​resistance ​genes, which ​might be ​expected as ​bacteria pass ​their genes ​from one ​generation to ​the next. ​

“The ​general trends ​we found are ​consistent with ​our previous ​work,” ​Dantas said. ​“We were ​not terribly ​surprised by ​the resistance ​genes that ​track with ​bacterial ​family trees. ​On the other ​hand, the genes ​we found that ​break the ​hereditary ​trend are quite ​worrisome. ​Genes that are ​the exceptions ​to the rule ​— that ​are not similar ​to the ​surrounding DNA ​— are the ​ones that are ​most likely to ​have undergone ​a gene-transfer ​event. And they ​are the ​resistance ​genes at ​highest risk of ​future ​transmission ​into unrelated ​bacteria.”​

Of the ​locations ​sampled in the ​study, ​resistance ​genes that are ​most likely to ​be mobile and ​able to jump ​from one ​bacterial ​strain to ​another were ​found in the ​highest numbers ​in the chicken ​coops of ​villagers in El ​Salvador and in ​the outgoing ​“​gray” ​water from the ​sewage ​treatment plant ​outside Lima. ​Not suitable ​for drinking, ​most of this ​water is ​released into ​the Pacific ​Ocean, and some ​is used to ​irrigate city ​parks, the ​researchers ​said. ​

“Soils ​in the chicken ​coops we ​studied appear ​to be hot spots ​for the ​exchange of ​resistance ​genes,” ​Dantas said. ​“This ​means disease-​causing ​bacteria in ​chickens are at ​risk of ​sickening ​humans and ​transferring ​their ​resistance ​genes in the ​process. Our ​study ​demonstrates ​the importance ​of public ​health ​guidelines that ​advise keeping ​animals out of ​cooking spaces.​” ​

As for the ​wastewater ​treatment plant,​ Dantas called ​it the perfect ​storm for ​transmitting ​antibiotic ​resistance ​genes. Such ​facilities are ​excellent at ​removing ​bacteria that ​are well-known ​for causing ​disease and can ​be grown in a ​petri dish, ​such as ​ E. coli . But that ​leaves room for ​other types of ​bacteria to ​grow and ​flourish. ​

“The ​system is not ​designed to do ​anything about ​environmental ​microbes that ​don’t ​make people ​sick,” ​Dantas said. ​“But some ​of these ​bacteria carry ​resistance ​genes that are ​known to cause ​problems in the ​clinic. We are ​inadvertently ​enriching this ​water with ​bacteria that ​carry ​resistance ​genes and then ​exposing people ​to these ​bacteria ​because the ​water is used ​to irrigate ​urban parks.​” ​

Dantas and ​his colleagues ​suspect that ​the antibiotic ​resistance they ​measured in ​microbes that ​survive the ​plant’s ​treatment ​process is ​driven by the ​presence of ​over-the-​counter ​antibiotics in ​the sewage ​being treated. ​The researchers ​measured ​antibiotic ​levels before ​and after ​treatment, and ​while most of ​these drug ​residues are ​removed during ​the process, ​the fact that ​they’re ​present at the ​beginning ​favors the ​survival of ​bacteria that ​are resistant ​to them. ​

“All ​the antibiotics ​we detected in ​the pre-treated ​water were ​among the top ​20 sold in Peru,​” Dantas ​said. “​These findings ​have implications ​for public ​health, perhaps ​in designing ​future ​wastewater ​treatment ​plants and in ​making policy ​decisions about ​whether ​antibiotics ​should be ​available ​without a ​prescription.​” ​

Últimas Notícias:
Embrapa Saneamento Rural

Balanço Social da Embrapa destaca ações em saneamento básico rural

As ações desenvolvidas pela Embrapa Instrumentação (São Carlos – SP) e parceiros em saneamento básico rural estão entre os nove casos de sucesso do Balanço Social da Embrapa 2023, que será apresentado na quinta-feira (25), a partir das 10 horas, em Brasília, na solenidade em comemoração aos 51 anos da Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária.

Leia mais »