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A case for the importance of following antibiotic resistant bacteria throughout the soil food web.

Carlos GarbisuItziar Alkorta
Published in: BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology (2023)
It is necessary to complement next-generation sequencing data on the soil resistome with theoretical knowledge provided by ecological studies regarding the spread of antibiotic resistant bacteria (ARB) in the abiotic and, especially, biotic fraction of the soil ecosystem. Particularly, when ARB enter agricultural soils as a consequence of the application of animal manure as fertilizer, from a microbial ecology perspective, it is important to know their fate along the soil food web, that is, throughout that complex network of feeding interactions among members of the soil biota that has crucial effects on species richness and ecosystem productivity and stability. It is critical to study how the ARB that enter the soil through the application of manure can reach other taxonomical groups (e.g., fungi, protists, nematodes, arthropods, earthworms), paying special attention to their presence in the gut microbiomes of mesofauna-macrofauna and to the possibilities for horizontal gene transfer of antibiotic resistant genes.
Keyphrases
  • human health
  • climate change
  • risk assessment
  • plant growth
  • heavy metals
  • copy number
  • sewage sludge
  • gene expression
  • microbial community
  • artificial intelligence
  • genome wide analysis