State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Harbin Institute of Technology Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518055, China.
State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resources and Environment, School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150090, China.
Environ Sci Technol. 2023 Aug 22;57(33):12137-12152. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.3c01128. Epub 2023 Aug 14.
Microorganisms colonizing the surfaces of microplastics form a plastisphere in the environment, which captures miscellaneous substances. The plastisphere, owning to its inherently complex nature, may serve as a "Petri dish" for the development and dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), adding a layer of complexity in tackling the global challenge of both microplastics and ARGs. Increasing studies have drawn insights into the extent to which the proliferation of ARGs occurred in the presence of micro/nanoplastics, thereby increasing antimicrobial resistance (AMR). However, a comprehensive review is still lacking in consideration of the current increasingly scattered research focus and results. This review focuses on the spread of ARGs mediated by microplastics, especially on the challenges and perspectives on determining the contribution of microplastics to AMR. The plastisphere accumulates biotic and abiotic materials on the persistent surfaces, which, in turn, offers a preferred environment for gene exchange within and across the boundary of the plastisphere. Microplastics breaking down to smaller sizes, such as nanoscale, can possibly promote the horizontal gene transfer of ARGs as environmental stressors by inducing the overgeneration of reactive oxygen species. Additionally, we also discussed methods, especially quantitatively comparing ARG profiles among different environmental samples in this emerging field and the challenges that multidimensional parameters are in great necessity to systematically determine the antimicrobial dissemination risk in the plastisphere. Finally, based on the biological sequencing data, we offered a framework to assess the AMR risks of micro/nanoplastics and biocolonizable microparticles that leverage multidimensional AMR-associated messages, including the ARGs' abundance, mobility, and potential acquisition by pathogens.
微生物在微塑料表面定殖形成了一个在环境中的“塑料体”,它可以捕获各种物质。由于其固有的复杂性,塑料体可能成为抗生素耐药基因(ARGs)发展和传播的“培养皿”,这给解决微塑料和 ARGs 这两个全球性挑战增加了一层复杂性。越来越多的研究深入了解了在微/纳米塑料存在的情况下 ARGs 增殖的程度,从而增加了抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)。然而,考虑到目前研究焦点日益分散的情况,仍然缺乏全面的综述。本综述重点关注微塑料介导的 ARGs 的传播,特别是确定微塑料对 AMR 贡献的挑战和观点。塑料体在持久的表面上积累生物和非生物物质,这反过来又为塑料体内和跨越塑料体边界的基因交换提供了一个首选环境。微塑料分解成更小的尺寸,如纳米级,可能会通过诱导活性氧的过度产生,作为环境胁迫物促进 ARGs 的水平基因转移。此外,我们还讨论了方法,特别是在这个新兴领域中定量比较不同环境样本中的 ARG 图谱的方法,以及多维参数在系统确定塑料体中抗菌传播风险方面的必要性。最后,基于生物测序数据,我们提出了一个框架来评估微/纳米塑料和可生物定殖的微颗粒的 AMR 风险,该框架利用了与 AMR 相关的多维消息,包括 ARGs 的丰度、可移动性以及病原体的潜在获得性。