4.8 Article

Bisphenols Promote the Pheromone-Responsive Plasmid-Mediated Conjugative Transfer of Antibiotic Resistance Genes in Enterococcus faecalis

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 24, Pages 17653-17662

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2c0534917653

Keywords

bisphenols; Enterococcus faecalis; conjugative transfer; antibiotic resistance genes; pheromone -regulated plasmid

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42177414]
  2. Tianjin Natural Science Foundation [17JCZDJC39100, 19JCYBJC23800]
  3. Special Fund of China [AWS18J004]

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The enrichment and spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) induced by environmental chemical pollution pose a threat to human health and ecological safety. This study established a new conjugation model and confirmed that environmentally relevant concentrations of bisphenols (BPs) can significantly promote the conjugation of ARGs mediated by plasmid pCF10. The findings provide new insight into the environmental behavior and biological effect of BPs and offer a new method and theory for studying the enrichment and spread of ARGs induced by environmental chemical pollution.
The enrichment and spread of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) induced by environmental chemical pollution further exacerbated the threat to human health and ecological safety. Several compounds are known to induce R plasmid-mediated conjugation through inducing reactive oxygen species (ROS), increasing cell membrane permeability, enhancing regulatory genes expression, and so forth. Up to now, there has been no substantial breakthrough in the studies of models and related mechanisms. Here, we established a new conjugation model using pheromone-responsive plasmid pCF10 and confirmed that five kinds of bisphenols (BPs) at environmentally relevant concentrations could significantly promote the conjugation of ARGs mediated by plasmid pCF10 in E. faecalis by up to 4.5-fold compared with untreated cells. Using qPCR, gene knockout and UHPLC, we explored the mechanisms behind this phenomenon using bisphenol A (BPA) as a model of BPs and demonstrated that BPA could upregulate the expression of pheromone, promote bacterial aggregation, and even directly activate conjugation as a pheromone instead of producing ROS and enhancing cell membrane permeability. Interestingly, the result of mathematical analysis showed that the pheromone effect of most BPs is more potent than that of synthetic pheromone cCF10. These findings provide new insight into the environmental behavior and biological effect of BPs and provided new method and theory to study on enrichment and spread of ARGs induced by environmental chemical pollution.

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