Heavy metals (HMs) act as a long-term selective pressure for the emergence and maintenance of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in agricultural soils. However, the effects of HMs on ARG distributions in paddy soils and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. In this study, 74 soil samples were collected from the paddy fields to explore the impact of HMs on ARG profiles. A total of 468 ARGs were detected in HM-contaminated soils. Variation partitioning analysis (VPA) and redundancy analysis (RDA) demonstrated that the bioavailable HMs contributed more significantly to ARG composition compared to the total HM content (8.59 % vs. 3.97 %). Structural equation models (SEMs) showed that bioavailable HMs affected ARGs mainly by negatively altering the microbial diversity. Furthermore, the co-occurrence analysis of ARGs and metal resistant genes (MRGs) was further performed at the metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) level. Consequently, 1145 MAGs that assigned to 29 bacterial phyla were found to concurrently harbor ARGs and MRGs, with the bacterial phyla Pseudomonadota being predominant ARG-MRG-carrying microbes for most coexistence types of ARGs and MRGs, i.e., multidrug-As, polymyxin-Cd, Quinolone-Cd, Beta-lactam-Pb, and multidrug-Zn. Our findings highlight that the extensive coexistence of ARG-MRG in microbial genomes is an important reason for the ARG pollution in HM-contaminated paddy soils.
Keywords: Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs); Bioavailable heavy metals; Metagenomics; Paddy soil; Soil environmental health.
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