Linton A H
Schriftenr Ver Wasser Boden Lufthyg. 1988;78:197-224.
Bacterial plasmids existed in bacteria before the antibiotic era but their presence was brought into prominence by the use of antibiotics which selected for antibiotic resistant strains. Subsequently, the range of genes carried on plasmids was shown to extend far beyond those coding for antibiotic resistance. Any consideration of plasmids in the environment, therefore, must include all plasmids whether or not they are genetically linked with antibiotic resistance. Antibiotic resistant bacteria may be found in the environment either by contamination with excreta from man and animals in which the strains were selected, or by their selection within the environment by antibiotics synthesized in situ or reaching the environment in an undegraded form in sewage from man and animals, or from industry. Other agents, also contaminating the environment, exert a selective pressure such as heavy metals in industrial effluents which select for metal resistance. This paper reviews the incidences and role of plasmids in various habitats including natural waters, soil, pastures, farm wastes, and human sewage from both hospitalised and other populations. Aspects of plasmid ecology, their biological role, and the transmissibility of genetic material between bacteria within the environment are considered. Two recent studies in Bristol, UK, are reported. The first was a genetic study on Escherichia coli isolates from calf slurry. Various DNA probes were used to determine the extent of gene exchange between the various serotypes within the natural environment. The second was a preliminary study to determine the stability of a recombinant plasmid, in a wild strain of Escherichia coli of pig origin, after its release into a semi-contained farm situation. It is now recognized that plasmids are widely distributed in bacterial populations in terrestrial and aquatic environments. Many have been detected by their carriage of genes coding for antibiotic or heavy metal resistance. Others, mainly cryptic in nature, have been demonstrated by plasmid profile studies on isolates from various habitats. Plasmids were shown to be present in a relatively few bacteria deposited in culture collections prior to the antibiotic era. Subsequently, the increased prevalence of R plasmids in bacteria in most ecosystems were due mainly to the selective pressure imposed by the use of antibiotics. This pressure may have been exerted either in the environment in which the strains were found or elsewhere, the environment subsequently being contaminated by antibiotic resistant bacteria.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在抗生素时代之前,细菌质粒就存在于细菌中,但抗生素的使用使其凸显出来,因为抗生素会选择出抗药菌株。随后发现,质粒携带的基因范围远远超出了编码抗生素抗性的基因。因此,对环境中质粒的任何考量都必须涵盖所有质粒,无论它们是否与抗生素抗性存在基因关联。抗药细菌可能通过被人和动物排泄物污染(这些人和动物体内的菌株是在排泄物中被选择出来的),或者通过环境中就地合成的抗生素,或来自人和动物或工业的未降解形式污水中的抗生素对其进行选择而在环境中被发现。其他同样污染环境的因素,如工业废水中的重金属,也会施加选择压力,从而筛选出抗金属的细菌。本文综述了质粒在各种栖息地(包括天然水体、土壤、牧场、农场废弃物以及住院患者和其他人群的生活污水)中的发生率和作用。文中还探讨了质粒生态学、它们的生物学作用以及环境中细菌之间遗传物质的可传递性。报告了英国布里斯托尔最近的两项研究。第一项是对来自小牛粪便的大肠杆菌分离株进行的遗传学研究。使用了各种DNA探针来确定自然环境中不同血清型之间基因交换的程度。第二项是一项初步研究,旨在确定一种重组质粒在猪源大肠杆菌野生菌株中释放到半封闭农场环境后是否稳定。现在人们认识到,质粒在陆地和水生环境的细菌群体中广泛分布。许多质粒是通过携带编码抗生素或重金属抗性的基因而被检测到的。其他质粒,主要是性质不明的隐蔽质粒,则是通过对来自各种栖息地的分离株进行质粒图谱研究而得以证明。在抗生素时代之前,保存在培养物保藏中心的细菌中相对较少存在质粒。随后,大多数生态系统中细菌里R质粒的流行率增加,主要是由于抗生素使用所施加的选择压力。这种压力可能是在发现菌株的环境中施加的,也可能是在其他地方施加的,随后环境被抗药细菌污染。(摘要截选至400字)