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Diversity, heavy metals, and antibiotic resistance in culturable heterotrophic bacteria isolated from former lead-silver-zinc mine heap in Tarnowskie Gory (Silesia, Poland).

Lea NosalovaJoanna WillnerAgnieszka FornalczykMariola SaternusJana Sedlakova-KadukovaMaria PiknovaPeter Pristas
Published in: Archives of microbiology (2022)
Mine tailings represent a great environmental concern due to their high contents of heavy metals. Cultivation analysis of microbiota of Tarnowskie Góry (Poland) mine tailing showed the occurrence of bacteria with colony-forming units as low as 5.7 × 10 4 per one gram of dried substrate. Among 110 bacterial isolates identified by a combination of MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and 16S rRNA gene sequencing, phylum Actinobacteria was dominant, followed by Firmicutes and Proteobacteria. Extremely high levels of heavy-metal resistance were observed in Arthrobacter spp., particularly for zinc (500 mg/L), lead (1500 mg/L), and cadmium (1000 mg/L). On the other hand, Staphylococcus spp. showed high tolerance to several antibiotics tested, especially ampicillin, partly due to blaZ gene presence. Due to the occurrence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, mine tailings are not the cause of heavy-metal contamination only, but also a source of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and thus may represent a serious risk for public health.
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