Ecological life strategies of microbes in response to antibiotics as a driving factor in soils

被引:26
作者
Sharma, Udita [1 ]
Rawat, Deepak [1 ,2 ]
Mukherjee, Paromita [1 ]
Farooqi, Furqan [1 ]
Mishra, Vandana [1 ,3 ]
Sharma, Radhey Shyam [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Delhi, Dept Environm Studies, Bioresources & Environm Biotechnol Lab, Delhi 110007, India
[2] Univ Delhi, Dept Environm Studies, Janki Devi Mem Coll, Delhi 110060, India
[3] Univ Delhi, Ctr Interdisciplinary Studies Mt & Hill Environm, Delhi 110007, India
[4] Univ Delhi, Inst Eminence, Delhi Sch Climate Change & Sustainabil, Delhi 110007, India
关键词
Antibiotic resistance; CSR theory; Microbial community shift; Functional traits; Ecological theory; Antibiotic pollution; RESISTANCE GENES; VETERINARY ANTIBIOTICS; COMMUNITY STRUCTURE; LONG-TERM; BIODEGRADATION; DEGRADATION; SORPTION; FATE; PHARMACEUTICALS; CLASSIFICATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158791
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Antibiotics as a selection pressure driving the evolution of soil microbial communities is not well understood. Since microbial functions govern ecosystem services, an ecological framework is required to understand and predict antibiotic-induced functional and structural changes in microbial communities. Therefore, metagenomic studies explaining the impacts of antibiotics on soil microbial communities were mined, and alterations in microbial taxa were analyzed through an ecological lens using Grimes's Competitor-Stress tolerator-Ruderal (CSR) model. We propose considering antibiotics as the primary abiotic factor mentioned in the CSR model and classifying non-susceptible microbial taxa as degraders, resistant, and resilient groups analogous to competitors, stress tolerators, and ruderal strategists, respectively. Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria, and Proteobacteria were among the phyla harboring most members with antibiotic-resistant groups. However, some antibiotic-resistant microbes in these phyla could not only tolerate but also subsist solely on antibiotics, while others degraded antibiotics as a part of secondary metabolism. Irrespective of their taxonomic affiliation, microbes with each life strategy displayed similar phenotypic characteristics. Therefore, it is recommended to consider microbial functional traits associated with each life strategy while analyzing the ecological impacts of antibiotics. Also, potential ecological crises posed by antibiotics through changes in microbial community and ecosystem functions were visualized. Applying ecological theory to understand and predict antibiotics-induced changes in microbial communities will also provide better insight into microbial behavior in the background of emerging contaminants and help develop a robust ecological classification system of microbes.
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页数:14
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