Abstract
Abstract
Many antibiotic resistance genes co-occur with resistance genes for
transition metals, such as copper, zinc, or mercury. In some environments, a
positive correlation between high metal concentration and high abundance of
antibiotic resistance genes has been observed, suggesting co-selection due to
metal presence. Of particular concern is the use of copper and zinc in animal
husbandry, leading to potential co-selection for antibiotic resistance in animal
gut microbiomes, slurry, manure, or amended soils. For antibiotics, predicted no
effect concentrations have been derived from laboratory measured minimum
inhibitory concentrations and some minimal selective concentrations have been
investigated in environmental settings. However, minimal co-selection
concentrations for metals are difficult to identify. Here, we use mathematical
modelling to provide a general mechanistic framework to predict minimal
co-selective concentrations for metals, given knowledge of their toxicity at
different concentrations. We apply the method to copper (Cu), Zinc (Zn), mercury
(Hg), lead (Pb) and silver (Ag), predicting their minimum co-selective
concentrations in mg/L (Cu: 5.5, Zn: 1.6, Hg: 0.0156, Pb: 21.5, Ag: 0.152). To
exemplify use of these thresholds, we consider metal concentrations from slurry
and slurry-amended soil from a UK dairy farm that uses copper and zinc as
additives for feed and antimicrobial footbath: the slurry is predicted to be
co-selective, but not the slurry-amended soil. This modelling framework could be
used as the basis for defining standards to mitigate risks of antimicrobial
resistance applicable to a wide range of environments, including manure, slurry
and other waste streams.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory