Functional metagenomics reveals wildlife as natural reservoirs of novel β-lactamases

The antibiotic resistances in bacteria are believed to rapidly evolve over time in the anthropogenic environments which enriched with selection pressures. However, the knowledge regarding the development of antibiotic resistance in wildlife and their habitats is scarce. It is, therefore, of great in...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2023-04, Vol.868, p.161505-161505, Article 161505
Hauptverfasser: Ren, Hao, Lu, Zhaoxiang, Sun, Ruanyang, Wang, Xiran, Zhong, Jiahao, Su, Tiantian, He, Qian, Liao, Xiaoping, Liu, Yahong, Lian, Xinlei, Sun, Jian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The antibiotic resistances in bacteria are believed to rapidly evolve over time in the anthropogenic environments which enriched with selection pressures. However, the knowledge regarding the development of antibiotic resistance in wildlife and their habitats is scarce. It is, therefore, of great interest and significance to unveil the yet-unknown antibiotic resistances in wildlife in accordance with One Health concept. To this end, we analyzed the samples taken from wildlife and surrounding environments using a functional metagenomics approach. By functional screening in combination with Illumina sequencing, a total of 32 candidate genes which encoding putative novel β-lactamase were identified. These putative β-lactamase were taxonomically assigned into bacteria of 23 genera from 7 phyla, where Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria and Firmicutes were dominant. The following functional assessment demonstrated that 4 novel β-lactamases, namely blaSSA, blaSSB1, blaSSB2 and blaSSD, were functionally active to confer the phenotypical resistance to bacteria by increasing MICs up to 128-fold. Further analysis indicated that the novel β-lactamases identified in the current study were able to hydrolyze a broad spectrum of β-lactams including cephalosporins, and they were genetically unique comparing with known β-lactamases. The plausible transmission of some novel β-lactamase genes was supported by our results as the same gene was detected in different samples from different sites. This study shed the light on the active role of wildlife and associated environments as natural reservoirs of novel β-lactamases, implying that the antibiotic resistances might evolve in absence of selection pressure and threaten public health once spread into clinically important pathogens. [Display omitted] •Functional metagenomic approach reveals abundance and diversity of ARGs in wildlife.•Wildlife and their habitats are the natural reservoir of novel β-lactamases.•Novel β-lactamases from wildlife confer broad β-lactam resistance to bacteria.•4 novel β-lactamases were identified to hydrolyze β-lactams and cephalosporins.•The novel β-lactamases in wildlife are potential threats to public health.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161505