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Unraveling the role of microplastics in antibiotic resistance: Insights from long-read metagenomics on ARG mobility and host dynamics

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2025 5 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Qiji Zhang, Qiji Zhang, Qiji Zhang, Yifan Fan, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Xin Qian, Yifan Fan, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Xin Qian, Yan Zhang Yifan Fan, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yifan Fan, Xin Qian, Xin Qian, Xin Qian, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Qiji Zhang, Qiji Zhang, Qiji Zhang, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Qiji Zhang, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yifan Fan, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Xin Qian, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Qiji Zhang, Qiji Zhang, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yifan Fan, Yan Zhang Xin Qian, Yan Zhang Yan Zhang Yifan Fan, Yifan Fan, Yan Zhang

Summary

Researchers used long-read metagenomics to investigate how microplastics serve as vectors for antibiotic resistance genes in aquatic environments. They found that plasmid-encoded resistance genes varied significantly between microplastic biofilms and surrounding water, highlighting horizontal gene transfer as a key mechanism for resistance gene enrichment on plastic surfaces. The study identified specific bacterial taxa driving this enrichment and revealed that enhanced cell adhesion and transporter activity on microplastics facilitate the spread of antibiotic resistance.

As two emerging pollutants, microplastics (MPs) potentially serve as vectors for antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in aquatic environments, but the mechanisms driving ARG enrichment remain unclear. This study used long-read metagenomics to investigate ARG mobility and hosts dynamics within the biofilms of MPs and rocks in different water environments. We identified distinct enrichment patterns for microbial communities and ARGs, highlighting the significant role of horizontal gene transfer in ARG enrichment. Specifically, plasmid-encoded ARGs varied significantly among MP biofilms, rock biofilms, and water samples, while chromosome-encoded ARGs remained consistent across these environments, emphasizing the impact of plasmids on ARG enrichment. Despite this, 55.1 % of ARGs were on chromosomes, indicating that host organisms also play a crucial role. The related mechanisms driving ARG enrichment included enhanced cell adhesion, increased transmembrane transporter activity, and responses to environmental stressors, which led to an increased presence of plasmid-encoded ARGs on MP biofilms, facilitating more frequent horizontal gene transfer. Additionally, the diversity of hosts on MPs was notably lower compared to the water column, with specific bacteria, including Herbaspirillu, Limnohabitans, Polaromonas, Variovorax, Rubrivivax, and Thauera significantly driving ARG enrichment. This study highlights key mechanisms and bacterial taxa involved in ARG dynamics on MPs.

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