Climate warming promotes collateral antibiotic resistance development in cyanobacteria.

Antibiotic interaction Collateral resistance Cyanobacteria-associated antibiotic resistance Resistance development Temperature

Journal

Water research
ISSN: 1879-2448
Titre abrégé: Water Res
Pays: England
ID NLM: 0105072

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
18 Apr 2024
Historique:
received: 14 12 2023
revised: 16 04 2024
accepted: 17 04 2024
medline: 25 4 2024
pubmed: 25 4 2024
entrez: 24 4 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Both cyanobacterial blooms and antibiotic resistance have aggravated worldwide and posed a great threat to public health in recent years. As a significant source and reservoir of water environmental resistome, cyanobacteria exhibit confusing discrepancy between their reduced susceptibility and their chronic exposure to antibiotic mixtures at sub-inhibitory concentrations. How the increasing temperature affects the adaptive evolution of cyanobacteria-associated antibiotic resistance in response to low-level antibiotic combinations under climate change remains unclear. Here we profiled the antibiotic interaction and collateral susceptibility networks among 33 commonly detected antibiotics in 600 cyanobacterial strains isolated from 50 sites across four eutrophicated lakes in China. Cyanobacteria-associated antibiotic resistance level was found positively correlated to antibiotic heterogeneity across all sites. Among 528 antibiotic combinations, antagonism was observed for 62 % interactions and highly conserved within cyanobacterial species. Collateral resistance was detected in 78.5 % of pairwise antibiotic interaction, leading to a widened or shifted upwards mutant selection window for increased opportunity of acquiring second-step mutations. We quantified the interactive promoting effect of collateral resistance and increasing temperature on the evolution of both phenotypic and genotypic cyanobacteria-associated resistance under chronic exposure to environmental level of antibiotic combinations. With temperature increasing from 16 °C to 36 °C, the evolvability index and genotypic resistance level increased by 1.25 - 2.5 folds and 3 - 295 folds in the collateral-resistance-informed lineages, respectively. Emergence of resistance mutation pioneered by tolerance, which was jointly driven by mutation rate and persister fraction, was found to be accelerated by increased temperature and antibiotic switching rate. Our findings provided mechanic insights into the boosting effect of climate warming on the emergence and development of cyanobacteria-associated resistance against collateral antibiotic phenotypes.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38657307
pii: S0043-1354(24)00543-8
doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2024.121642
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

121642

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Auteurs

Zhiyuan Wang (Z)

National Key Laboratory of Water Disaster Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China; Center for Eco-Environment Research, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China; Yangtze Institute for Conservation and Development, Hohai University, Nanjing 210098, China.

Qiuwen Chen (Q)

National Key Laboratory of Water Disaster Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China; Center for Eco-Environment Research, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China; Yangtze Institute for Conservation and Development, Hohai University, Nanjing 210098, China. Electronic address: qwchen@nhri.cn.

Jianyun Zhang (J)

National Key Laboratory of Water Disaster Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China; Yangtze Institute for Conservation and Development, Hohai University, Nanjing 210098, China. Electronic address: jyzhang@nhri.cn.

Huacheng Xu (H)

Nanjing Institute of Geography & Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China.

Lingzhan Miao (L)

College of Environment, Hohai University, Nanjing 210098, China.

Tao Zhang (T)

Center for Eco-Environment Research, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China.

Dongsheng Liu (D)

Center for Eco-Environment Research, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China.

Qiuheng Zhu (Q)

Center for Eco-Environment Research, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China.

Hanlu Yan (H)

National Key Laboratory of Water Disaster Prevention, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China; Center for Eco-Environment Research, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China.

Dandan Yan (D)

Center for Eco-Environment Research, Nanjing Hydraulic Research Institute, Nanjing 210098, China.

Classifications MeSH