Pre and Post antibiotic epoch: insights into the historical spread of antimicrobial resistance

Adrian Cazares, Wendy Figueroa, Daniel Cazares, Leandro Lima, Jake D. Turnbull, Hannah McGregor, Jo Dicks, Sarah Alexander, Zamin Iqbal, Nicholas Thomson
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Abstract

Plasmids are now the primary vectors of antimicrobial resistance, but our understanding of how human industrialisation of antibiotics influenced this is limited by a paucity of data predating the antibiotic era (PAE). By investigating plasmids from clinically relevant bacteria isolated between 1917 and 1954 and comparing them to modern plasmids, we captured over 100 years of evolution. We show that while all PAE plasmids were devoid of resistance genes and most never acquired them, a small minority evolved to drive the global spread of resistance to first-line and last-resort antibiotics in Gram-negative bacteria. They have evolved through complex microevolution and fusion events into a distinct group of highly recombinogenic, multi-replicon, self-transmissible plasmids that now pose the highest risk to resistance dissemination, and therefore human health.
抗生素时代前后:抗菌药耐药性历史传播的启示
质粒现在是抗菌药耐药性的主要载体,但由于抗生素时代(PAE)之前的数据很少,我们对人类抗生素工业化如何影响抗菌药耐药性的了解受到了限制。通过研究 1917 年至 1954 年间从临床相关细菌中分离出来的质粒,并将它们与现代质粒进行比较,我们捕捉到了 100 多年的进化过程。我们发现,虽然所有 PAE 质粒都不含抗性基因,而且大多数质粒从未获得抗性基因,但少数质粒的进化推动了革兰氏阴性细菌对一线和最后一线抗生素抗性的全球传播。它们通过复杂的微进化和融合事件进化成了一组独特的高重组性、多复制子、可自我传播的质粒,目前对耐药性传播和人类健康构成了最高风险。
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