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  4. Glacier-Fed Stream Biofilms Harbor Diverse Resistomes and Biosynthetic Gene Clusters
 
research article

Glacier-Fed Stream Biofilms Harbor Diverse Resistomes and Biosynthetic Gene Clusters

Busi, Susheel Bhanu
•
de Nies, Laura
•
Pramateftaki, Paraskevi  
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January 23, 2023
Microbiology Spectrum

Antimicrobial resistance is an omnipresent phenomenon in the anthropogenically influenced ecosystems. However, its role in shaping microbial community dynamics in pristine environments is relatively unknown.

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a universal phenomenon the origins of which lay in natural ecological interactions such as competition within niches, within and between micro- to higher-order organisms. To study these phenomena, it is crucial to examine the origins of AMR in pristine environments, i.e., limited anthropogenic influences. In this context, epilithic biofilms residing in glacier-fed streams (GFSs) are an excellent model system to study diverse, intra- and inter-domain, ecological crosstalk. We assessed the resistomes of epilithic biofilms from GFSs across the Southern Alps (New Zealand) and the Caucasus (Russia) and observed that both bacteria and eukaryotes encoded twenty-nine distinct AMR categories. Of these, beta-lactam, aminoglycoside, and multidrug resistance were both abundant and taxonomically distributed in most of the bacterial and eukaryotic phyla. AMR-encoding phyla included Bacteroidota and Proteobacteria among the bacteria, alongside Ochrophyta (algae) among the eukaryotes. Additionally, biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) involved in the production of antibacterial compounds were identified across all phyla in the epilithic biofilms. Furthermore, we found that several bacterial genera (Flavobacterium, Polaromonas, Superphylum Patescibacteria) encode both atimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) and BGCs within close proximity of each other, demonstrating their capacity to simultaneously influence and compete within the microbial community. Our findings help unravel how naturally occurring BGCs and AMR contribute to the epilithic biofilms mode of life in GFSs. Additionally, we report that eukaryotes may serve as AMR reservoirs owing to their potential for encoding ARGs. Importantly, these observations may be generalizable and potentially extended to other environments that may be more or less impacted by human activity.IMPORTANCE Antimicrobial resistance is an omnipresent phenomenon in the anthropogenically influenced ecosystems. However, its role in shaping microbial community dynamics in pristine environments is relatively unknown. Using metagenomics, we report the presence of antimicrobial resistance genes and their associated pathways in epilithic biofilms within glacier-fed streams. Importantly, we observe biosynthetic gene clusters associated with antimicrobial resistance in both pro- and eukaryotes in these biofilms. Understanding the role of resistance in the context of this pristine environment and complex biodiversity may shed light on previously uncharacterized mechanisms of cross-domain interactions.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1128/spectrum.04069-22
Web of Science ID

WOS:000928354700001

Author(s)
Busi, Susheel Bhanu
de Nies, Laura
Pramateftaki, Paraskevi  
Bourquin, Massimo  
Kohler, Tyler J.
Ezzat, Leila  
Fodelianakis, Stilianos
Michoud, Gregoire  
Peter, Hannes  
Styllas, Michail  
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Date Issued

2023-01-23

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY

Published in
Microbiology Spectrum
Subjects

Microbiology

•

glacier-fed streams

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metagenomics

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antimicrobial resistance

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biosynthetic gene clusters

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cross-domain interactions

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freshwater ecosystems

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antibiotic-resistance

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evolution

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ecology

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
RIVER  
Available on Infoscience
March 13, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/195731
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