Elevated levels of antibiotic resistance genes as a factor of human-caused global environmental change

被引:1
|
作者
Rillig, Matthias C. [1 ,2 ]
Li, Changchao [3 ]
Rodriguez del Rio, Alvaro [1 ,2 ]
Zhu, Yong-Guan [4 ]
Jin, Ling [3 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Free Univ Berlin, Inst Biol, Altensteinstr 6, D-14195 Berlin, Germany
[2] Berlin Brandenburg Inst Adv Biodivers Res, Berlin, Germany
[3] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[4] Chinese Acad Sci, Res Ctr Ecoenvironm Sci, State Key Lab Urban & Reg Ecol, Beijing, Peoples R China
[5] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Hlth Technol & Informat, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
关键词
antibiotic resistance; antimicrobial resistance; ecosystems; global environmental change; microbial communities; One Health; SOIL; ECOLOGY;
D O I
10.1111/gcb.17419
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) have moved into focus as a critically important response variable in global change biology, given the increasing environmental and human health threat posed by these genes. However, we propose that elevated levels of ARGs should also be considered a factor of global change, not just a response. We provide evidence that elevated levels of ARGs are a global change factor, since this phenomenon is linked to human activity, occurs globally, and affects biota. We explain why ARGs could be considered the global change factor, rather than the organisms containing them; and we highlight the difference between ARGs and the presence of antibiotics, which are not necessarily linked since elevated levels of ARGs are caused by multiple factors. Importantly, shifting the perspective to elevated levels of ARGs as a factor of global change opens new avenues of research, where ARGs can be the experimental treatment. This includes asking questions about how elevated ARG levels interact with other global change factors, or how ARGs influence ecosystem processes, biodiversity or trophic relationships. Global change biology stands to profit from this new framing in terms of capturing more completely the real extent of human impacts on this planet. Human-caused global environmental change is a complex phenomenon, consisting of many factors. We here propose to add another key factor, namely increased levels of antibiotic resistance genes in the environment. It is a biological factor, but we argue it should be the genes themselves, rather than the organisms carrying them, that should be regarded as a new factor of global change.image
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Evidence for carbon dioxide and moisture interactions from the leaf cell up to global scales: Perspective on human-caused climate change
    Alpert, P.
    Niyogi, D.
    Pielke, R. A., Sr.
    Eastman, J. L.
    Xue, Y. K.
    Raman, S.
    [J]. GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE, 2006, 54 (1-2) : 202 - 208
  • [32] Latent antibiotic resistance genes are abundant, diverse, and mobile in human, animal, and environmental microbiomes
    Juan Salvador Inda-Díaz
    David Lund
    Marcos Parras-Moltó
    Anna Johnning
    Johan Bengtsson-Palme
    Erik Kristiansson
    [J]. Microbiome, 11
  • [33] Latent antibiotic resistance genes are abundant, diverse, and mobile in human, animal, and environmental microbiomes
    Inda-Diaz, Juan Salvador
    Lund, David
    Parras-Molto, Marcos
    Johnning, Anna
    Bengtsson-Palme, Johan
    Kristiansson, Erik
    [J]. MICROBIOME, 2023, 11 (01)
  • [34] A global atlas of marine antibiotic resistance genes and their expression
    Xu, Nuohan
    Qiu, Danyan
    Zhang, Zhenyan
    Wang, Yan
    Chen, Bingfeng
    Zhang, Qi
    Wang, Tingzhang
    Hong, Wenjie
    Zhou, Ning-Yi
    Penuelas, Josep
    Gillings, Michael
    Zhu, Yong-Guan
    Qian, Haifeng
    [J]. WATER RESEARCH, 2023, 244
  • [35] Global Increase of Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Conjugative Plasmids
    Wang, Xiaolong
    Zhang, Hanhui
    Long, Xiang
    Xu, Ximing
    Ren, Hongqiang
    Mao, Daqing
    Alvarez, Pedro J. J.
    Luo, Yi
    [J]. MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM, 2023, 11 (02):
  • [36] Assessment of global health risk of antibiotic resistance genes
    Zhenyan Zhang
    Qi Zhang
    Tingzhang Wang
    Nuohan Xu
    Tao Lu
    Wenjie Hong
    Josep Penuelas
    Michael Gillings
    Meixia Wang
    Wenwen Gao
    Haifeng Qian
    [J]. Nature Communications, 13
  • [37] Global biogeography and projection of soil antibiotic resistance genes
    Zheng, Dongsheng
    Yin, Guoyu
    Liu, Min
    Hou, Lijun
    Yang, Yi
    Van Boeckel, Thomas P.
    Zheng, Yanling
    Li, Ye
    [J]. SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2022, 8 (46)
  • [38] Assessment of global health risk of antibiotic resistance genes
    Zhang, Zhenyan
    Zhang, Qi
    Wang, Tingzhang
    Xu, Nuohan
    Lu, Tao
    Hong, Wenjie
    Penuelas, Josep
    Gillings, Michael
    Wang, Meixia
    Gao, Wenwen
    Qian, Haifeng
    [J]. NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2022, 13 (01)
  • [39] GLOBAL TRENDS AND PERFORMANCES OF STUDIES ON ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE GENES
    Zheng, Chun-Li
    Su, Jian-Qiang
    Zhu, Dong
    Xu, Yao-Yang
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING AND MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2020, 19 (03): : 485 - 495
  • [40] Greenwashing of Local Government: The Human-Caused Risks in the Process of Environmental Information Disclosure in China
    Tang, Yanhong
    Yang, Rui
    Chen, Yingwen
    Du, Mengjin
    Yang, Yichen
    Miao, Xin
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2020, 12 (16)