| Literature DB >> 35453275 |
Miaoling Meng1, Yaying Li2,3, Huaiying Yao1,2,3.
Abstract
Due to selective pressure from the widespread use of antibiotics, antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are found in human hosts, plants, and animals and virtually all natural environments. Their migration and transmission in different environmental media are often more harmful than antibiotics themselves. ARGs mainly move between different microorganisms through a variety of mobile genetic elements (MGEs), such as plasmids and phages. The soil environment is regarded as the most microbially active biosphere on the Earth's surface and is closely related to human activities. With the increase in human activity, soils are becoming increasingly contaminated with antibiotics and ARGs. Soil plasmids play an important role in this process. This paper reviews the current scenario of plasmid-mediated migration and transmission of ARGs in natural environments and under different antibiotic selection pressures, summarizes the current methods of plasmid extraction and analysis, and briefly introduces the mechanism of plasmid splice transfer using the F factor as an example. However, as the global spread of drug-resistant bacteria has increased and the knowledge of MGEs improves, the contribution of soil plasmids to resistance gene transmission needs to be further investigated. The prevalence of multidrug-resistant bacteria has also made the effective prevention of the transmission of resistance genes through the plasmid-bacteria pathway a major research priority.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotic resistance genes; gene transfer; plasmid; soil
Year: 2022 PMID: 35453275 PMCID: PMC9024699 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11040525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the splice transfer of plasmids from donor cells to recipient cells. The tra regions encode all genes involved in conjugational transfer (green); the origin of transfer oriT (yellow); the leading gene (red) is the first to be transferred into the recipient cell; Other Tra proteins (TraI, TraM, and TraY) constitute the relaxosome, which, in combination with the integration host factor (IHF), binds to oriT; chromosomal single-strand binding protein SSB; the leading region contains a specific 328 bp Frpo region (for F plasmid RNA polymerase).
Distribution of antibiotic resistance genes in different environments.
| ARGs | Antibiotic Types | Origin | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| nonmobile dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS) genes | sulfonamides | Beech and pine forest soils | [ |
| quinolone, aminoglycoside, beta-lactam, sulfonamide, tetracycline | Primeval forest soil | [ | |
| aminoglycoside, sulfonamides, tetracycline | Manure-amended agricultural soil | [ | |
| aminoglycoside, beta-lactam, sulfonamides, tetracycline, vancomycin | Greenhouse vegetable production bases | [ | |
| quinolone, beta-lactam, sulfonamide, tetracycline, chloromycetin, streptomycin | Layer farm soil | [ | |
| rifamycin, aminocoumarin, glycopeptide | Arctic permafrost zone | [ | |
| macrolides, glycopeptides, tetracyclines | Deep-sea sediments | [ | |
| beta-lactam, tetracycline, sulfonamides | Farm, Aquaculture wastewater | [ | |
|
| aminoglycoside, macrolides, quinolone, tetracycline, sulfonamide | Domestic wastewater, Medical wastewater | [ |