key: cord-1053141-3z7tzvk6 authors: Calero-Cáceres, William; Marti, Elisabet; Olivares-Pacheco, Jorge; Rodriguez-Rubio, Lorena title: Editorial: Antimicrobial Resistance in Aquatic Environments date: 2022-02-24 journal: Front Microbiol DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.866268 sha: d665ca184cb3e28323ea37336a830d22af2b34f2 doc_id: 1053141 cord_uid: 3z7tzvk6 nan The current SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has exacerbated the rapid diagnosis of infectious diseases outbreaks to take suitable epidemiological measures to minimize negative impacts (Oude Munnink et al., 2021) . However, the silent pandemic of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) faces several outstanding questions about its evolution and dissemination. The urgency of an integrated approach involving all ecological compartments, where antimicrobials and antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) reservoirs are generated, maintained, and disseminated, is urgently required (Da Silva et al., 2020) . Aquatic environments are critical for understanding how the AMR develops and spreads worldwide, considering their role as an endpoint of effluents of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) or direct disposition of sewage from human or animal origin (Zheng et al., 2021; Miłobedzka et al., 2022) , the runoff of biosolids in the agriculture (Buta et al., 2021) , and other anthropogenic factors that contribute to the propagation of antimicrobial resistance determinants. Therefore, this Research Topic aimed to deliver state-of-the-art knowledge and ideas on aquatic environments' role in selecting, maintaining, and dispersing AMR determinants. Fourteen articles from Europe, Asia, America, and Africa have been published on this topic that complements our knowledge and formulate several questions for the scientific community worldwide. Hospital wastewaters represent a broad reservoir of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (ARB) and ARGs, which include extended-spectrum β-lactamases (ESBLs) and carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE), for instance (Hassoun-Kheir et al., 2020) . However, there are significant knowledge gaps about the proper wastewater treatment technologies to be applied and a lack of protocols and indicators for executing an appropriate risk assessment (Nguyen et al., 2021) . This Research Topic includes articles that cover the influence of hospital discharges on their receiving water bodies. In Romania, the study of Popa et al. describes the transmission of multidrugresistant Klebsiella pneumoniae ST101 clone from hospital to wastewater and its persistence after chlorine treatment. The article highlights the risk of inappropriate hospital sewage disposition onto the surface water and their potential implications on the trophic chain. In Brazil, the study of Esposito et al. reports the genomic data and the virulence potential of Pseudomonas aeruginosa that harbor the São-Paulo-Metallo-β-lactamase (SPM-1), carried by high-risk clone ST277 isolated from urban rivers. The authors observed a common resistome and virulome between clinical and environmental SPM-1-producing P. aeruginosa strains endemic from Brazil. Additionally, the SNP-based phylogenomics showed a high similarity between clinical and environmental genomes, suggesting that these clones could be disseminated onto water bodies from hospital settings. One of the current outstanding questions about the analysis of AMR in the environment is the standardization of genomic and metagenomic assays that could minimize the spatiotemporal variability, the allochthonous ARG levels, the environmental resistome complexity, and the biases about genomic extraction, sequencing, and genomic analyses (Calero-Cáceres et al., 2019; Li et al., 2020) . Two articles that highlight the advantages of metagenomics in AMR analysis were included in this Research Topic. First, Perry et al. analyzed the influence of different hospital clinical activities on the abundance of ARGs in hospital wastewater in Scotland, highlighting the advantages of shotgun metagenomics to identify a full range of ARGs that could be used to guide environmental policies about AMR. Additionally, the article of Guo et al., using a high-throughput sequencing-based metagenomic approach, investigated the composition of bacteria and ARGs in wastewater from hospitals in China, suggesting a correlation between the abundance of ARGs and specific bacterial genera and remarking that it is necessary to complement their study including physicochemical analysis for the raw wastewater. Both articles show interesting results and note the necessity to develop an integrative framework that would include omics, physicochemical and epidemiological research to enhance the evaluation of ARGs pollution in environmental sources. Several papers of this special issue analyzed the influence of WWTPs and their discharges on AMR dissemination: In South Korea, Shin et al. characterized an extensively drug-resistant (XDR) E. coli isolated from influents of a WWTP. This study suggests that these isolates could be disseminated into the outgoing river from WWTP. The sewage could act as a potential spreader of ARGs, including emerging carbapenemase genes like bla NDM−5 . In South Africa, Mbanga et al. characterized isolates of Enterococcus spp. from a WWTP and their receiving water bodies that serve as a water source for domestic, agricultural, and recreational purposes. Those isolates harbor a wide plethora of ARGs and virulence factors, showing that the effluents of the WWTP could act as a dissemination vector of multidrugresistant (MDR) microorganisms. This Research Topic includes a review paper by Uluseker et al. that extensively reviews the current knowledge on sources, spread, and removal mechanisms of ARGs in microbial communities of wastewaters, WWTPs, and downstream recipients. This review includes the basis of antibiotic resistance, an explanation about the dynamics of AMR and antibiotics in WWTPs, and suggestions to be considered for the operation, regulation, and design of WWTPs. These studies suggest the urgent need for regular surveillance and management of water bodies to limit the spread of these isolates. Singh et al. analyzed Escherichia coli from the river Yamuna (India), a highly polluted river that receives an intense anthropogenic influence from urban and animal origin. Their results showed high AMR profiles, highlighting the presence of CTX-M-15 type ESBLs and the occurrence of class I integrons in their isolates. In Ireland, Sala-Comorera et al. demonstrated the strong impact of different watercourses discharges onto the levels of AMR in both bacterial and bacteriophage fractions in marine bathing waters, which may expose the users to fecal pollution and therefore could increase the probability to be exposed to ARGs. Another outstanding question about AMR in the environment is to demonstrate which levels of AMR are necessary to represent a real environmental danger. Finally, Pallares-Vega et al., shown by in vitro assays the role of ecological factors that could hamper conjugative plasmid transfer from gut bacteria once discharged into the environment. Their findings highlight the possibility that the fecal organisms may transfer plasmids in aquatic ecosystems, despite the variable conditions that could occur environmentally. The food supply chain connects environmental sources of bacteria with humans and represents another outstanding field in the One Health perspective for understanding the dissemination and evolution of AMR. The article of Montero et al. analyzed ESBL producing E. coli isolated from irrigation waters, vegetables, and fruits in Ecuador. These authors detected that the allelic variants of the bla CTX−M gene found in irrigation channels and vegetables were the same as those observed in commensal E. coli from domestic animals, and commensal and pathogenic E. coli from humans, suggesting a connection between these different sources. In addition, the article of Cheng et al. analyzed sediments from aquaculture farms in China by constructing network plots based on 16S rRNA metagenomics, physicochemical analysis, and quantification of ARGs. Their results provide evidence for understanding the environmental risks associated with aquaculture practices. On the other hand, Ye et al. showed in Edwardsiella tarda, an important pathogen in aquaculture, that reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a role in bacterial resistance and sensitivity to ceftazidime. They saw a lower ROS production in ceftazidime-resistant E. tarda than in a sensitive strain related to the inactivation of the pyruvate cycle. Additionally, their study reveals a new mechanism that increases ROS production, the activation of the pyruvate cycle by Fe 3+ . These findings provide tools and knowledge for future new strategies to fight MDR pathogens. Zeballos-Gross et al. comprehensively reviewed the potential role of gulls as reservoirs and vectors of AMR in the environment, highlighting the current knowledge about related research, the phenotypic and molecular characterization of AMR, limitations about the existing methodologies, and suggestions for improving the derived results. In summary, this Research Topic provides an excellent update of the role of aquatic ecosystems on the evolution and dissemination of AMR worldwide. Therefore, the editors encourage the scientific community to consider the results and challenges of this special issue. WC-C, JO-P, LR-R, and EM contributed to analyzing the reviewed articles and preparing the manuscript. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version. LR-R is a Serra Húnter Lecturer. Sewage sludge in agriculture -the effects of selected chemical pollutants and emerging genetic resistance determinants on the quality of soil and crops -a review Bacteriophages as environmental reservoirs of antibiotic resistance Antimicrobial resistance: time for action Comparison of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes abundance in hospital and community wastewater: a systematic review Source tracking of antibiotic resistance genes in the environment -Challenges, progress, and prospects Monitoring antibiotic resistance genes in wastewater environments: the challenges of filling a gap in the One-Health cycle Monitoring antibiotic resistance genes in wastewater treatment: current strategies and future challenges The next phase of SARS-CoV-2 surveillance: real-time molecular epidemiology A systematic review of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes in estuarine and coastal environments The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.