原生动物的捕食通过微生物组的拮抗作用促进抗菌药耐药性的传播

Chen Liu, Yijin Wang, Zeyuan Zhou, Shimei Wang, Zhong Wei, Mohammadhossein Ravanbakhsh, Qirong Shen, Wu Xiong, George A Kowalchuk, Alexandre Jousset
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摘要

无声明。利益冲突抗生素耐药性已发展成为一种主要的公共健康威胁。在这项研究中,我们发现原生动物的捕食是土壤微生物组中抗生素耐药性传播的一个被忽视的驱动因素。以往的研究主要关注抗生素耐药性基因的分布,而我们的研究揭示了土壤原生动物在形成抗生素耐药性动态中的关键作用。在这项研究中,我们结合使用了元基因组学和对照实验,证明了原生动物会导致抗生素耐药性的增加。我们从机理上将这种增加与微生物组中抗菌活性的增强联系起来。原生动物的捕食为能够产生拮抗次生代谢物的细菌提供了竞争优势,而次生代谢物反过来又促进了抗生素耐药细菌的产生。这项研究深入揭示了原生动物与土壤微生物组在调节抗生素耐药性动态方面的复杂相互作用。这项研究强调了自上而下的控制对抗生素耐药性传播的重要性,并将其与微生物组内的跨领域相互作用直接联系起来。管理原生生物群落可能成为控制环境中抗生素耐药性爆发的重要工具。
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Protist predation promotes antimicrobial resistance spread through antagonistic microbiome interactions
None declared.Conflicts of interestAntibiotic resistance has grown into a major public health threat. In this study, we reveal predation by protists as an overlooked driver of antibiotic resistance dissemination in the soil microbiome. While previous studies have primarily focused on the distribution of antibiotic resistance genes, our work sheds light on the pivotal role of soil protists in shaping antibiotic resistance dynamics. Using a combination of metagenomics and controlled experiments in this study, we demonstrate that protists cause an increase in antibiotic resistance. We mechanistically link this increase to a fostering of antimicrobial activity in the microbiome. Protist predation gives a competitive edge to bacteria capable of producing antagonistic secondary metabolites, which secondary metabolites promote in turn antibiotic-resistant bacteria. This study provides insights into the complex interplay between protists and soil microbiomes in regulating antibiotic resistance dynamics. This study highlights the importance of top-down control on the spread of antibiotic resistance and directly connects it to cross-kingdom interactions within the microbiome. Managing protist communities may become an important tool to control outbreaks of antibiotic resistance in the environment.
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