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07/19/2024 11:18

Antibiotic Resistance Genes a Proposed Factor of Global Change

Christine Xuan Müller Stabsstelle Kommunikation und Marketing
Freie Universität Berlin

    International research team led by scientist from Freie Universität Berlin proposes that elevated levels of antibiotic resistance genes be considered a new factor of global change

    Antibiotic resistance is a serious problem facing human health, with the environmental reservoirs of genes that provide this type of resistance an established topic of investigation for researchers around the world. “These resistance genes do occur naturally, for example, in the soil. However, our proposal is related to how their number is increasing as a result of human activity,” says Rillig. In part, this resistance is due to antibiotics that make their way into the environment through improper disposal and their increased use in human and veterinary medicine. However, these are not the only reasons. It has been shown that many factors of global change also contribute toward raising antibiotic resistance. For example, pollution with heavy metals or microplastics has also been shown to elevate levels of ARGs.

    “Faced with the number of global change factors that increase antibiotic resistance in the environment, the global spread of these effects, and the fact that these genes have very real biological consequences, we need to consider the increased number of ARGs itself a factor of global change,” emphasizes Rillig, first author of the study. In the paper, the researchers argue that ARGs meet all the necessary criteria to be defined as a factor of global change.

    Including ARGs in the list of factors of global change would bring with it an important change in perspective. Previously, these genes were primarily considered measurement variables, i.e., the research focus was on if and how various human-caused factors influence these genes. Now, however, the ARGs themselves can be a treatment factor in experiments, i.e., a variable that can be directly manipulated in the lab. “This means we can uncover the effects these genes have on ecosystem processes or biodiversity – for example, when we add them as part of a controlled experiment – as well as investigate how they interact with other important factors of global change,” explains Rillig. This would require some innovations to be made in terms of experimental design, but Rillig and his team are already at work planning the first experiments.


    Contact for scientific information:

    Prof. Dr. Matthias C. Rillig, Rillig Group - Ecology of Plants, Institute of Biology, Freie Universität Berlin, Altensteinstraße 6, 14195 Berlin; Email: rillig@zedat.fu-berlin.de, Lab website: https://rilliglab.org/


    Original publication:

    Rillig M.C., Li C., Rodríguez del Río A., Zhu Y.G., Jin L. (2024). Elevated Levels of Antibiotic Resistance Genes as a Factor of Human-Caused Global Environmental Change. Global Change Biology; doi: 10.1111/gcb.17419


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    Biology, Environment / ecology, Medicine, Social studies
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