River plastic pollution a potential breeding ground for antimicrobial resistant pathogens

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Image by Hush Naidoo Jade Photography on UnSplash
Image by Hush Naidoo Jade Photography on UnSplash

Plastic debris in rivers may harbour potentially pathogenic microbes and act as reservoirs for antimicrobial resistance genes, according to new research. Plastic films and wooden sticks were submerged downstream from a wastewater treatment plant for one week, and researchers compared the microorganisms living on their surfaces. While the microbial communities living on plastic and wood contained similar pathogens that were distinct from those in surrounding waters, they each harboured genes for resistance to different types of antimicrobials. Degraded plastics harboured particularly significant amounts of antimicrobial resistant genes, and authors of the study say that more research is needed to understand the long-term impacts of plastic pollution on human health.

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From: Springer Nature

Microbiology: River plastics may harbour potential pathogens and antimicrobial resistance genes

Microbial communities growing on plastic debris in rivers may have the capacity to harbour potentially pathogenic microbes and act as reservoirs of antimicrobial resistance genes, according to a study published in Microbiome. The findings also highlight differences in the potential pathogens and antimicrobial resistance genes that new and degraded  plastics may have the capacity to harbour.

Vinko Zadjelovic, Elizabeth Wellington, Joseph Christie-Oleza and colleagues characterised the microbial communities found on the surface of low-density polyethylene plastic films after they were submerged in the River Sowe, UK one kilometre downstream from a wastewater treatment plant for seven days in February 2020. Half of the plastic samples were new and half had been heated in an oven for six months to mimic the degradation or weathering of plastic that often occurs in the environment. They then compared this with microbial communities found on a control surface (wood sticks) that had been submerged in the same river for seven days and with microorganisms extracted from river water samples.

The authors found that plastic, wood and water samples all harboured potentially pathogenic microbes but that the types of potential pathogens extracted from plastic and wood samples differed from those in river water samples. Plastic and wood samples harboured the potential pathogens Pseudomonas aeruginosaAcinetobacter and Aeromonas — bacteria known as ‘opportunistic’ that pose a greater risk to individuals with compromised immune systems — while water samples contained the potential human pathogens Escherichia, Salmonella, Klebsiella, and Streptococcus. Similarly, the authors found that although antimicrobial resistance genes were present within microorganisms extracted from all samples , the types of antimicrobials that these genes conferred resistance to differed between those from plastic and wood samples, and those from water samples.

When the authors compared the microbial communities growing on new and degraded plastics, they found that P. aeruginosa (which can cause infections in hospital patients) was particularly abundant on degraded plastic samples. They speculate that this could be due to degraded plastics releasing larger amounts of organic compounds that encourage microbial growth than new plastics. They also found that the relative abundance of antimicrobial resistance genes present in microbial communities was higher among those from degraded plastic samples than among those from new plastic samples, however they note that the reasons for this are unclear.

The authors suggest that further research is needed to investigate the potential risks that plastic pollution with the capacity to harbour potentially pathogenic microbes and antimicrobial resistance genes could pose to human health and the spread of antimicrobial resistance genes in the environment.

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Research Springer Nature, Web page
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conference:
Nature: Microbiome
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Universidad de Antofagasta, University of Warwick, University of the Balearic Islands
Funder: This work was supported by the research projects Plastic Vectors (NE/S005501/1 funded by NERC) and polyDEmar (PID2019-109509RB-I00 funded by MCIN/ AEI/10.13039/501100011033). V.Z. was supported by ANID—Subvención a la Instalación en la Academia convocatoria año 2022, Folio 85220034. J.A.C-O. was supported by the Ramón y Cajal contract RYC-2017-22452 (funded by MCIN/ AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and “ESF Investing in your future”).
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