2
Comments
[Free Report for November] Significance of Research Investigating the Spread of Antibiotic Resistance Genes |
---|
by Seojin Lee | 05-12-2021 18:45 0 |
This report revolves around a research study that I thought was interesting and extremely significant. This research is titled ¡°Air pollution could drive global dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes,¡± and can be found here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41396-020-00780-2. This study investigates the possibility of the spread of antibiotic resistance genes through snow and was conducted by scholars present all around the world, from Asia to Europe. To understand this research, some context could be helpful. Many of you may know that some bacteria are harmful to humans and can cause infections. Therefore, antibiotics were created; these items were designed to kill harmful bacteria and are being used to treat bacterial infections. However, because of the rapid reproduction of bacteria and their ability to partake in horizontal gene transfer, many types of bacteria have evolved and carry genes that are part of their DNA, which give bacteria with these genes the ability to be unaffected by antibiotics. These genes are called antibiotic resistance genes. Because bacteria have the ability to absorb these genes that are spread throughout the environment when they are near them, the spread of antibiotic resistance genes is a serious issue, and scientists have been finding ways to limit the spread of these genes in order to prevent more bacteria from becoming resistant to antibiotics. The authors of the research explain that it has previously been found that these genes could spread through atmospheric particles and return to the earth as snow. Therefore, they observed the contents of antibiotic resistance genes in fresh snow. They did this by investigating 44 samples of snow around the world, across three different continents. Most importantly, their main research finding was that antibiotic resistance genes did actually spread from place to place through atmospheric particles returning to earth as snow. The significance of the research is the confirmation that antibiotics could be spread through the atmosphere worldwide. This means that antibiotic resistance genes stemming from a single location such as a sewage or hospital could end up traveling fairly long distances and could even end up in separate continents of the world. This is a severe issue, as the results of the study indicate that bacteria all over the world could quickly develop antibiotic resistance, causing the antibiotics, the tool that we relied on for decades, to become useless. Zhu, G., Wang, X., Yang, T. et al. Air pollution could drive global dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes. ISME J 15, 270–281 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-020-00780-2 |
|
2 Comments
Hello Seojin, this is your mentor Hannah. Sorry for the late comment.
Oh no, such an unbelievable research.. Since water cycles throughout whole Earth, bacterias and viruses that are able to be spread by water could be a big harm to living creatures.
Thank you for your great article and please keep up with your wonderful work :)
Sincerly,
Hannah
Posted 12-12-2021 10:11
Hello Seojin, this is your mentor Joon.
Yes it has been addressed that there would be germs and bacteria resistant towards antibiotics, that is already existing. Such worries became a reality, and therefore 2nd, 3rd generation antibiotics were introduced. Pharmacists are always worrying about appearance of new germs resistant to novel drugs. I have read the article that the speed of appearance is much faster than creation of drugs. What we have to do is to limit the use of antibiotics as much as possible, and need to limit its use. Or else we would face serious problem.
Well read your article, and hope you to keep up.
Best,
Joon
Posted 06-12-2021 10:19