Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Global soil antibiotic resistance genes are associated with increasing risk and connectivity to human resistome

Yuxiang Zhao, Liguan Li, Yue Huang, Xiaoqing Xu, Zishu Liu, Shuxian Li, Lizhong Zhu, Baolan Hu, Tong Zhang

Nature Communications · 2025

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Summary

Soil is a reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), and understanding its connection to human antibiotic resistome is crucial for the One Health framework. Rank I ARGs appear key to deciphering this relationship, but their global distribution and attribution in soil remain unclear. To fill this gap, we analyze 3965 metagenomic data (12 habitats, including soil, feces, sewage) and 8388 genomes of Escherichia coli isolates. Results show that soil ARG risk has increased over time (from 2008 to 2021). We introduce a "connectivity" metric that evaluates cross-habitat ARGs connectivity through sequence similarity and phylogenetic analysis, and reveal higher genetic overlap with clinical E. coli genomes (1985-2023) over time suggesting an increasing link between soil and human resistome. A

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41467-025-61606-3
Catalogue ID
SNmoh39635-78zj8d
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