Utilizing co-abundances of antimicrobial resistance genes to identify potential co-selection in the resistome

Author:

Martiny Hannah-Marie1ORCID,Munk Patrick1ORCID,Brinch Christian1ORCID,Aarestrup Frank M.1ORCID,Calle M. Luz2ORCID,Petersen Thomas N.1

Affiliation:

1. Research Group for Genomic Epidemiology, Technical University of Denmark, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark

2. Biosciences Department, Faculty of Sciences and Technology, University of Vic - Central University of Catalonia, Vic, Spain

Abstract

ABSTRACT The rapid spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a threat to global health, and the nature of co-occurring antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) may cause collateral AMR effects once antimicrobial agents are used. Therefore, it is essential to identify which pairs of ARGs co-occur. Given the wealth of next-generation sequencing data available in public repositories, we have investigated the correlation between ARG abundances in a collection of 214,095 metagenomic data sets. Using more than 6.76∙10 8 read fragments aligned to acquired ARGs to infer pairwise correlation coefficients, we found that more ARGs correlated with each other in human and animal sampling origins than in soil and water environments. Furthermore, we argued that the correlations could serve as risk profiles of resistance co-occurring to critically important antimicrobials (CIAs). Using these profiles, we found evidence of several ARGs conferring resistance for CIAs being co-abundant, such as tetracycline ARGs correlating with most other forms of resistance. In conclusion, this study highlights the important ARG players indirectly involved in shaping the resistomes of various environments that can serve as monitoring targets in AMR surveillance programs. IMPORTANCE Understanding the collateral effects happening in a resistome can reveal previously unknown links between antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs). Through the analysis of pairwise ARG abundances in 214K metagenomic samples, we observed that the co-abundance is highly dependent on the environmental context and argue that these correlations can be used to show the risk of co-selection occurring in different settings.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

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