From climate change to AMR: understanding environmental-human health issues in a One Health framework

Thomas Reid, Jordyn Broadbent
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Abstract

As the impacts of climate change intensify, our interconnectedness to the environment around us seems ever more apparent. Changing terrestrial landscapes impact adjacent aquatic ecosystems, as the terrestrial-aquatic continuum experiences the ever-pressing stresses of anthropogenic activity. In the Canadian Arctic, ancient carbon stores and contaminants such as methylmercury are emerging as permafrost thaw accelerates, changing their biogeochemical nature, impacting local communities and threatening ecological health in ways still yet to be fully understood. Awakening microorganisms in these once frozen grounds are all too eager to get to work, as scientists continue to try to understand how, where, and why climate change is impacting aquatic ecosystems across Canada. Increasing aquatic nutrient loads and chemical/biological contaminants adjacent to urban and agricultural lands also impact both ecosystem and ultimately human health. In the shadow of a global pandemic, the need to understand how environmental-human interactions impact human health is ever pressing, requiring the collective expertise of researchers across the environmental-human health landscape. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR), despite being a natural evolutionary mechanism for microbial survival in the environment, has been increasing in presence and prevalence in healthcare systems worldwide, resulting in drug-resistant infections that can be fatal. As such, there is a need to understand AMR in both its natural state within the environmental microbial biosphere, alongside those places (i.e., agricultural lands, wastewater treatment outflows etc.) where humans have introduced co-selective agents such as metals, antibiotic residues and other compounds that can further facilitate and even promote resistance activity in the natural environment (Fig. 1). This connection between the human health landscape and the environment around us is a vital part of understanding the risks of both climate change and AMR, requiring an integrated and collaborative One Health approach across disciplines. Here we present research associated with our Genomics Research and Development Initiative programs using novel genomics tools and large-scale laboratory simulations to better understand the impacts of climate change and AMR in a multi-disciplinary environmental context. This work helps fullfil the need to understand the dynamics of these two global threats in an trans-disciplinary nature, drawing on the expertise of environmental microbiologists, hydrologists, bioinformaticians, and water quality experts, in tandem with public health and infectious disease experts to better understand how these threats will evolve as our planet tries to adapt to the complex stressors of the Anthropocene.
从气候变化到抗生素耐药性:在同一个健康框架下理解环境-人类健康问题
随着气候变化的影响加剧,我们与周围环境的相互联系似乎越来越明显。不断变化的陆地景观影响邻近的水生生态系统,因为陆地-水生连续体经历了人类活动日益紧迫的压力。在加拿大的北极地区,随着永久冻土融化加速,古老的碳储存和甲基汞等污染物正在出现,改变了它们的生物地球化学性质,影响了当地社区,并以尚未完全了解的方式威胁着生态健康。随着科学家们继续试图了解气候变化如何、在哪里以及为什么影响加拿大各地的水生生态系统,这些曾经冻结的土地上觉醒的微生物都急于开始工作。城市和农业用地附近不断增加的水生养分负荷和化学/生物污染物也会影响生态系统,并最终影响人类健康。在全球大流行的阴影下,了解环境-人类相互作用如何影响人类健康的需求日益迫切,需要整个环境-人类健康领域的研究人员的集体专业知识。抗菌素耐药性(AMR)尽管是微生物在环境中生存的自然进化机制,但在全球卫生保健系统中的存在和流行程度不断增加,导致可能致命的耐药感染。因此,有必要了解环境微生物生物圈内自然状态下的抗菌素耐药性,以及人类引入金属等共选择剂的地方(即农业用地、废水处理流出物等)。抗生素残留和其他化合物可以进一步促进甚至促进自然环境中的耐药性活动(图1)。人类健康景观与我们周围环境之间的这种联系是理解气候变化和抗菌素耐药性风险的重要组成部分,需要跨学科的综合和协作的“同一个健康”方法。在这里,我们介绍了与基因组学研究和开发计划相关的研究,使用新的基因组学工具和大规模实验室模拟,以更好地了解气候变化和多学科环境下抗菌素耐药性的影响。这项工作有助于满足以跨学科性质了解这两种全球威胁动态的需求,利用环境微生物学家、水文学家、生物信息学家和水质专家的专业知识,与公共卫生和传染病专家一起,更好地了解这些威胁将如何演变,因为我们的星球试图适应人类世的复杂压力源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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