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Emerging Microbial and Enzymatic Approaches for Sustainable Antibiotic Biodegradation in Livestock Manure to Mitigate Water Pollution Risks
Date Issued
2025-10-14
Date Available
2026-01-15T16:32:10Z
Abstract
The extensive use of antibiotics in animal husbandry leads to the release of unmetabolised residues and the dissemination of antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) in manure, posing environmental and public health challenges. Conventional treatment technologies, including hydrolysis, photodegradation, and phytoremediation, are often constrained by incomplete mineralisation, high cost, and environmental variability. Biocatalytic and microbially mediated processes are increasingly recognised as sustainable alternatives. Enzymes, which in clinical contexts confer resistance, can, in environmental matrices, catalyse the dismantling of antibiotic scaffolds, attenuating bioactivity and promoting detoxification. Catalytic classes such as hydrolases, transferases, and oxidoreductases mediate diverse transformations, including hydrolytic cleavage, functional group transfer, and oxidative modification. Microbial consortia and bioaugmentation further enhance biodegradation, while biochar and other amendments reduce ARG persistence. Advances in multi-omics, enzyme engineering, and immobilisation have expanded catalytic repertoires, improved stability, and enabled integration with composting, anaerobic digestion, and hybrid bioprocesses. Nonetheless, incomplete degradation, recalcitrant intermediates, and horizontal gene transfer remain challenges. importantly, since degradation products may leach into soils and aquatic systems, optimising these processes is critical to prevent residues from entering the water cycle. This review synthesises advances in microbial and enzymatic degradation strategies, highlighting opportunities for sustainable manure management while mitigating water pollution risks.
Sponsorship
University College Dublin
Other Sponsorship
Institute of Animal Science, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (IAS-CAAS)
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
MDPI
Journal
Water
Volume
17
Issue
20
Copyright (Published Version)
2025 the Authors
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
Gao et al. 2025 water-17-02960.pdf
Size
4.57 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
2198f89baa5ca3b519cc8a50ad2c86b4
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