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Climate warming increases the proportions of specific antibiotic resistance genes in natural soil ecosystems

Authors :
Zixin Li
Anqi Sun
Xiaofei Liu
Qing-Lin Chen
Li Bi
Pei-Xin Ren
Ju-Pei Shen
Shengsheng Jin
Ji-Zheng He
Hang-Wei Hu
Yusheng Yang
Source :
Journal of hazardous materials. 430
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Understanding the future distribution of antibiotic resistance in natural soil ecosystems is important to forecast their impacts on ecosystem and human health under projected climate change scenarios. Therefore, it is critical and timely to decipher the links between climate warming and antibiotic resistance, two of Earth's most imminent problems. Here, we explored the role of five-year simulated climate warming (+ 4 °C) on the diversity and proportions of soil antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) across three seasons in both plantation and natural forest ecosystems. We found that the positive effects of warming on the number and proportions of ARGs were dependent on the sampling seasons (summer, autumn and winter), and seasonality was a key factor driving the patterns of ARG compositions in forest soils. Fifteen ARGs, conferring resistance to common antibiotics including aminoglycoside, beta-lactam, macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B, multidrug, sulfonamide, and tetracycline, were significantly enriched in the warming treatment. We showed that changes in soil properties and community compositions of bacteria, fungi and protists can explain the changes in soil ARGs under climate warming. Taken together, these findings advance our understanding of environmental ARGs under the context of future climate change and suggest that elevated temperature may promote the abundance of specific soil ARGs, with important implications for ecosystem and human health.

Details

ISSN :
18733336
Volume :
430
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of hazardous materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b6fa2e86030b07ede2a4741c7963d8c4