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Qing Wang

Researcher at Hebei University of Engineering

Publications -  30
Citations -  1450

Qing Wang is an academic researcher from Hebei University of Engineering. The author has contributed to research in topics: Antibiotics & Gut flora. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 26 publications receiving 830 citations. Previous affiliations of Qing Wang include Tianjin University & Nankai University.

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Persistence of extracellular DNA in river sediment facilitates antibiotic resistance gene propagation.

TL;DR: Extracellular DNA in sediment is a major ARG reservoir that could facilitate antibiotic resistance propagation, and chromosomally encoded 16S rRNA genes were undetectable after 8 weeks, suggesting higher persistence of plasmid-borne ARGs in river sediment.
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Simultaneous removal of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes from pharmaceutical wastewater using the combinations of up-flow anaerobic sludge bed, anoxic-oxic tank, and advanced oxidation technologies.

TL;DR: A lab-scale simulation reactor is designed, including up-flow anaerobic sludge bed (UASB), anoxic-oxic tank (A/O), and four separate advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) i.e., UV, Ozonation, Fenton, and Fenton/UV, to simultaneously remove 18 antibiotics and 10 ARGs from a real pharmaceutical wastewater.
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Proliferation of Multidrug-Resistant New Delhi Metallo-β-lactamase Genes in Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants in Northern China

TL;DR: NDM-1 genes prevailed through several treatment units (including disinfection by chlorination) in two WWTPs in northern China, raising the possibility of propagation to indigenous bacteria.
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Ionic Liquid Facilitates the Conjugative Transfer of Antibiotic Resistance Genes Mediated by Plasmid RP4

TL;DR: This study confirms that the ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate ([BMIm][PF6]) facilitates the horizontal transfer of plasmid RP4 through a conjugation mechanism and not by natural transformation.
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Occurrence and distribution of clinical and veterinary antibiotics in the faeces of a Chinese population

TL;DR: This study first to investigate the occurrence and distribution of typical antibiotics in the faeces of a Chinese population and thereby provide a reference for the intensive study of the effects and mechanisms of antibiotics on human gut microbiota.