Institute of Environmental Microbiology, College of Resources and Environment, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou 350002, China; email:
Centre for Geobiology and Geochemistry, School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, Cardiff University, CF10 3AT Cardiff, United Kingdom.
Annu Rev Microbiol. 2021 Oct 8;75:175-197. doi: 10.1146/annurev-micro-032921-123231. Epub 2021 Aug 3.
Competition shapes evolution. Toxic metals and metalloids have exerted selective pressure on life since the rise of the first organisms on the Earth, which has led to the evolution and acquisition of resistance mechanisms against them, as well as mechanisms to weaponize them. Microorganisms exploit antimicrobial metals and metalloids to gain competitive advantage over other members of microbial communities. This exerts a strong selective pressure that drives evolution of resistance. This review describes, with a focus on arsenic and copper, how microorganisms exploit metals and metalloids for predation and how metal- and metalloid-dependent predation may have been a driving force for evolution of microbial resistance against metals and metalloids.
竞争塑造了进化。自地球上第一批生物出现以来,有毒金属和类金属对生命施加了选择性压力,这导致了针对它们的抵抗机制以及将它们武器化的机制的进化和获得。微生物利用抗菌金属和类金属来获得相对于微生物群落中其他成员的竞争优势。这产生了强大的选择性压力,推动了抵抗能力的进化。本综述重点介绍砷和铜,描述了微生物如何利用金属和类金属进行捕食,以及金属和类金属依赖的捕食可能是微生物对金属和类金属产生抗性的进化的驱动力。