Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Proliferate in Agricultural Soils
Infectious diseases kill roughly 13 million people
worldwide, annually, a toll that continues to rise, aided and abetted by
resistance genes. Now a study, published in the March Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy finds reservoirs of
resistance in agricultural soils. These contained more diverse populations of
drug resistant bacteria, with greater levels of resistance, than composted and
forest soils. Vegetable garden soil alone harbored multi-drug resistant
bacteria, and also had the highest level of resistance to three major
antibiotic classes.
“The observations of this study point to the widespread
presence of high level antibiotic-resistant bacteria in agricultural soils,”
says first author Magdalena Popowska of the University of Warsaw, Poland.
Antibiotics, and resistance genes thereto, occur naturally
in soil due to the arms race between microbial species competing for territory.
“Almost 50 percent of Actinomycetes
isolated from soil are capable of synthesizing antibiotics, which provide a
natural antibiotic residue in soils,” says Popowska. But the use of antibiotics
to promote livestock growth boosts the resistance to a whole new level, as
demonstrated by the differences in resistance level in agricultural and
forested soils, she says. Manure from antibiotic-fed animals exacerbates the
resistance spread, as demonstrated by the high levels in the manure-amended
vegetable garden soils.
The spread of resistance and multi-resistant strains of
pathogens and opportunistic bacteria that can infect humans and animals is
aided and abetted by the fact that they are frequently carried on mobile
genetic elements, notably plasmids and transposons, that can be transferred not
only among bacteria of the same species, but among different species, says
Popowska.
The results of this study “should assist in the development
of regulations regarding the use of antibiotics in the broader environment e.g.
in plant protection products fish farming, and industry,” says Popowska. “We
think they will also help optimize methods allowing the combating of emerging
bacterial infections, as well as in the development and application of new
chemotherapeutic agents.”
The use of antibiotics “should be restricted to dangerous
bacterial infections, and to strict medical supervision,” says Popowska. “This
cannot be emphasized strongly enough.”
(M. Popowska, M. Rzeczycka, A. Miernik, A. Krawczyk-Balska,
F. Walsh, and B. Duffy, 2012. Influence of soil use on prevalence of
tetracycline, streptomycin, and erythromycin resistance and associated
resistance genes. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy 56:1434-1443.)
Download a PDF of the journal article at: http://bit.ly/asm0312b

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