A global baseline for qPCR-determined antimicrobial resistance gene prevalence across environments
Journal article, 2023

The environment is an important component in the emergence and transmission of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Despite that, little effort has been made to monitor AMR outside of clinical and veterinary settings. Partially, this is caused by a lack of comprehensive reference data for the vast majority of environments. To enable monitoring to detect deviations from the normal background resistance levels in the environment, it is necessary to establish a baseline of AMR in a variety of settings. In an attempt to establish this baseline level, we here performed a comprehensive literature survey, identifying 150 scientific papers containing relevant qPCR data on antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) in environments associated with potential routes for AMR dissemination. The collected data included 1594 samples distributed across 30 different countries and 12 sample types, in a time span from 2001 to 2020. We found that for most ARGs, the typically reported abundances in human impacted environments fell in an interval from 10-5 to 10-3 copies per 16S rRNA, roughly corresponding to one ARG copy in a thousand bacteria. Altogether these data represent a comprehensive overview of the occurrence and levels of ARGs in different environments, providing background data for risk assessment models within current and future AMR monitoring frameworks.

AMR

Surveillance

Antibiotic resistance

qPCR

Monitoring

Author

Anna Abramova

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Thomas U. Berendonk

Technische Universität Dresden

Johan Bengtsson-Palme

University of Gothenburg

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Environment International

0160-4120 (ISSN) 1873-6750 (eISSN)

Vol. 178 108084

Predicting future pathogenicity and antibiotic resistance

Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF) (FFL21-0174), 2022-08-01 -- 2027-12-31.

EMBARK: Establishing a Monitoring Baseline for Antibiotic Resistance in Key environments

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2019-00299), 2022-05-01 -- 2023-12-31.

Subject Categories

Evolutionary Biology

Infectious Medicine

Microbiology

Microbiology in the medical area

Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology

DOI

10.1016/j.envint.2023.108084

PubMed

37421899

More information

Latest update

7/21/2023