4.7 Article

Global Distribution and Diversity of Prevalent Sewage Water Plasmidomes

期刊

MSYSTEMS
卷 7, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/msystems.00191-22

关键词

sewage water plasmidome; AMR; replication initiator proteins; bacteriophages; metagenomics

资金

  1. Novo Nordisk Foundation [NNF16OC0021856]
  2. European Union [773830]
  3. FULL-FORCE project

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the dynamics of sewage plasmidomes globally and finds that plasmid-backbone gene combinations are more prevalent in European sewage, with Acinetobacter being the dominant host due to selective pressure for macrolide resistance genes. The presence of macrolide resistance genes in Firmicutes and Acinetobacter hosts highlights a potential reservoir for antibiotic resistance among pathogens worldwide.
Sewage water from around the world contains an abundance of short plasmids, several of which harbor antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs). The global dynamics of plasmid-derived antimicrobial resistance and functions are only starting to be unveiled. Here, we utilized a previously created data set of 159,332 assumed small plasmids from 24 different global sewage samples. The detailed phylogeny, as well as the interplay between their protein domains, ARGs, and predicted bacterial host genera, were investigated to understand sewage plasmidome dynamics globally. A total of 58,429 circular elements carried genes encoding plasmid-related features, and MASH distance analyses showed a high degree of diversity. A single (yet diverse) cluster of 520 predicted Acinetobacter plasmids was predominant among the European sewage water. Our results suggested a prevalence of plasmid-backbone gene combinations over others. This could be related to selected bacterial genera that act as bacterial hosts. These combinations also mirrored the geographical locations of the sewage samples. Our functional domain network analysis identified three groups of plasmids. However, these backbone domains were not exclusive to any given group, and Acinetobacter was the dominant host genus among the theta-replicating plasmids, which contained a reservoir of the macrolide resistance gene pair msr(E) and mph(E). Macrolide resistance genes were the most common in the sewage plasmidomes and were found in the largest number of unique plasmids. While msr(E) and mph(E) were limited to Acinetobacter, erm(B) was disseminated among a range of Firmicutes plasmids, including Staphylococcus and Streptococcus, highlighting a potential reservoir of antibiotic resistance for these pathogens from around the globe. IMPORTANCE Antimicrobial resistance is a global threat to human health, as it inhibits our ability to treat infectious diseases. This study utilizes sewage water plasmidomes to identify plasmid-derived features and highlights antimicrobial resistance genes, particularly macrolide resistance genes, as abundant in sewage water plasmidomes in Firmicutes and Acinetobacter hosts. The emergence of macrolide resistance in these bacteria suggests that macrolide selective pressure exists in sewage water and that the resident bacteria can readily acquire macrolide resistance via small plasmids.

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