Biology Department, Queens College of The City University of New York, Flushing, New York, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences and Geology, Queensborough Community College, The City University of New York, Bayside, New York, USA.
mBio. 2021 Dec 21;12(6):e0196621. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01966-21. Epub 2021 Dec 7.
In the struggle with antibiotic resistance, we are losing. There is now a serious threat of moving into a postantibiotic world. High levels of resistance, in terms of both frequency and strength, have evolved against all clinically approved antibiotics worldwide. The usable life span of new clinically approved antibiotics is typically less than a decade before resistance reaches frequencies so high as to require only guarded usage. However, microbes have produced antibiotics for millennia without resistance becoming an existential issue. If resistance is the inevitable consequence of antibiotic usage, as has been the human experience, why has it not become an issue for microbes as well, especially since resistance genes are as prevalent in nature as the genes responsible for antibiotic production? Here, we ask how antibiotics can exist given the almost ubiquitous presence of resistance genes in the very microbes that have produced and used antibiotics since before humans walked the planet. We find that the context of both production and usage of antibiotics by microbes may be key to understanding how resistance is managed over time, with antibiotic synthesis and resistance existing in a paired relationship, much like a cipher and key, that impacts microbial community assembly. Finally, we put forward the cohesive, ecologically based "secret society" hypothesis to explain the longevity of antibiotics in nature.
在与抗生素耐药性的斗争中,我们正在败下阵来。现在正严重地面临着进入后抗生素时代的威胁。在全球范围内,所有经临床批准使用的抗生素都出现了高水平的耐药性,无论是耐药频率还是耐药强度都在不断上升。新的经临床批准使用的抗生素的可用寿命通常不到十年,就会出现耐药频率如此之高以至于只能谨慎使用的情况。然而,微生物已经生产抗生素数千年了,而耐药性却从未成为一个生存问题。如果耐药性是抗生素使用的必然结果,就像人类的经验一样,那么为什么它还没有成为微生物的问题,特别是因为耐药基因在自然界中与负责抗生素生产的基因一样普遍存在?在这里,我们想知道,鉴于在人类出现之前就一直在生产和使用抗生素的微生物中,几乎普遍存在耐药基因,抗生素是如何存在的。我们发现,微生物生产和使用抗生素的背景可能是理解随着时间的推移如何管理耐药性的关键,抗生素的合成和耐药性存在配对关系,就像密码和密钥一样,影响着微生物群落的组装。最后,我们提出了一个具有凝聚力的、基于生态学的“秘密社会”假说,以解释抗生素在自然界中的长寿。