Zhang Dandan, Li Jie, Zhang Guilong, Xu Yan
Agro-Environmental Protection Institute, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Key Laboratory of Original Agro-Environmental Pollution Prevention and Control, MARA, Tianjin and Tianjin Key Laboratory of Agro-Environment and Agro-Product Safety, Tianjin 300191, China.
Agro-Environmental Protection Institute, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Key Laboratory of Original Agro-Environmental Pollution Prevention and Control, MARA, Tianjin and Tianjin Key Laboratory of Agro-Environment and Agro-Product Safety, Tianjin 300191, China; Agro-Environmental Protection Institute, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Qingyun Comprehensive Test Base, Dezhou 253000, China.
Environ Int. 2025 Jan;195:109247. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2024.109247. Epub 2024 Dec 31.
The soil salinity and alkalinity play an important role in the occurrence and proliferation of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Yet, little is known the underlying mechanism by which soil salinity and alkalinity affect antibiotic resistance evolution. Here we investigated the ARGs variation in soil salinity and alkalinity environments created by different fertilization, and explored the biological mechanisms that salinity and alkalinity alter the evolutionary paradigm of antibiotic resistance. The results showed the soil treated by organic fertilizer exhibited a low salinity, neutral level (TSD 239.20 μS/cm, pH 7.17). The ARG abundance in the OF treatment was the highest, keeping an average of 67.83 TPM. Beside the effect of direct input of organic fertilizer at the beginning, it was important to note that, ARGs abundance during planting showed significant correlations with pH and electric conductivity. We observed that changes in microbial survival strategies under different salinity and alkalinity conditions further affected ARG hosts abundance. Indoor experiments demonstrated that there was a survival trade-off between the growth of resistant bacteria and the evolution of antibiotic resistance in salinity and alkalinity environments. Meta-genomic and Meta-transcriptomic analysis consistently demonstrated bacterial antibiotic resistance was primarily associated with pyruvate, energy and lipid metabolic pathways. The functional gene related to salinity and alkalinity, like cysH, cysK, plsB and plsC showed negative correlations with MDR. Prokaryotic transcription assays validated these relations. This study well explains the prevalence of soil ARGs after different fertilization regimes and will give a deeper understanding for the effect of soil salinity and alkalinity on antibiotic resistance evolution.
土壤盐碱化在抗生素抗性基因(ARGs)的产生和扩散中起着重要作用。然而,关于土壤盐碱化影响抗生素抗性进化的潜在机制却知之甚少。在此,我们研究了不同施肥方式所营造的土壤盐碱化环境中ARGs的变化情况,并探讨了盐碱度改变抗生素抗性进化模式的生物学机制。结果表明,施用有机肥处理的土壤呈现低盐度、中性水平(总溶解固体239.20 μS/cm,pH值7.17)。有机肥处理组中ARG丰度最高,平均保持在67.83 TPM。除了一开始有机肥直接输入的影响外,需要注意的是,种植期间ARGs丰度与pH值和电导率呈现显著相关性。我们观察到,不同盐碱度条件下微生物生存策略的变化进一步影响了ARG宿主的丰度。室内实验表明,在盐碱化环境中,抗性细菌的生长与抗生素抗性的进化之间存在生存权衡。宏基因组和宏转录组分析一致表明,细菌抗生素抗性主要与丙酮酸、能量和脂质代谢途径有关。与盐碱度相关的功能基因,如cysH、cysK、plsB和plsC与多重耐药性呈负相关。原核转录分析验证了这些关系。本研究很好地解释了不同施肥制度后土壤ARGs的流行情况,并将更深入地理解土壤盐碱化对抗生素抗性进化的影响。