ORIGINAL PAPER
Bacteria and associated antibiotic resistance in air filter-derived biological material from utility vehicles at mechanical-biological treatment plants
 
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1
Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine, Łódź, Poland (Biological Safety Unit)
 
2
Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland (DNA Sequencing and Synthesis Facility, Institute of Biochemistry and Biophysics)
 
 
Online publication date: 2026-05-14
 
 
Corresponding author
Anna Kozajda   

Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine, Biological Safety Unit, św. Teresy od Dzieciątka Jezus 8, 91-348 Łódź, Poland
 
 
 
HIGHLIGHTS
  • The mechanical-biological treatment environment is microbiologically contaminated.
  • Workers are exposed to pathogenic bacteria and antibiotic resistance genes.
  • The use of next-generation sequencing allowed for the detection of antimicrobial resistance genes within the air filters.
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ABSTRACT
Objectives: The study objective was to assess occupational exposure to bacteria and antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) present on air filters of utility vehicles used in the working environment of mechanical-biological treatment (MBT) facilities, in the context of workers health risks. Material and methods: The study was conducted in summer 2024 in 9 air filters from utility vehicles used in MBT plants in Poland. External filters were removed from the vehicle’s ventilation system, packed and shipped according to instructions. From the duplicate filters samples DNA was isolated and high-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) was carried out. Bioinformatic data analysis was conducted to detect bacteria and ARGs in air filters’ surfaces. Results: Totally, 34 bacterial taxa were detected in relative abundance ≥0.5%. The genera most frequently present at the highest relative abundances: Saccharomonospora, Thermobifida, Nocardiopsis, Pectobacterium, Aerococcus, Thermoactinomyces, Novibacillus and Streptomyces. Across all bacteria isolated from the analyzed filters, regardless of their relative abundance, a total of 91 taxa were classified into risk groups 2 or 3 (86 and 5 taxa, respectively). The most frequently detected ARGs were those encoding resistance to a single class of antibiotics (AAC(3)-VIIa, aadA2, ANT(6)-Ia, APH(3’’)-Ia, APH(3’’)-Ib, APH(6)-Id, cml, cmx, lnuA, lnuD, novA, parY, sul2, vanHF, vanJ, vanRA, vanRI, vanRO – each at least on 4 air filters). Antimicrobial resistance genes encoding multi antibiotic resistance were also detected: CRP, emtA, erm(34), erm(36), ermA, ermC, ermF, ermG, ermT, ermX, ernB, H-NS, mel, msrA, msrE, mtrA, optrA, ramA, ykkD – each at least on 1 air filter. Conclusions: Despite the limited number of analyzed filters, the study demonstrated a high bacterial species diversity in the MBT plant environment. The MBT workers are exposed to bacteria with high pathogenic potential and to ARGs encoding resistance to antibiotics used exclusively in human medicine, used in human and veterinary medicine, and not intended for human use. Int J Occup Med Environ Health. 2026;39(2)
eISSN:1896-494X
ISSN:1232-1087
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