2012
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00018
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Origin and Evolution of Antibiotic Resistance: The Common Mechanisms of Emergence and Spread in Water Bodies

Abstract: The environment, and especially freshwater, constitutes a reactor where the evolution and the rise of new resistances occur. In water bodies such as waste water effluents, lakes, and rivers or streams, bacteria from different sources, e.g., urban, industrial, and agricultural waste, probably selected by intensive antibiotic usage, are collected and mixed with environmental species. This may cause two effects on the development of antibiotic resistances: first, the contamination of water by antibiotics or other… Show more

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Cited by 339 publications
(211 citation statements)
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References 151 publications
(178 reference statements)
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“…In environments containing diverse resistance elements and diverse selective agents, plasmids can acquire genes for resistance to multiple antibiotics, disinfectants, and metals and at the same time assemble genes for degradative pathways capable of acting upon other xenobiotics (236). For these reasons, aquatic environments are regarded as a natural reactor for the generation of novel xenogenetic DNA elements (146,153,228,237).…”
Section: Selection In Natural Environmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In environments containing diverse resistance elements and diverse selective agents, plasmids can acquire genes for resistance to multiple antibiotics, disinfectants, and metals and at the same time assemble genes for degradative pathways capable of acting upon other xenobiotics (236). For these reasons, aquatic environments are regarded as a natural reactor for the generation of novel xenogenetic DNA elements (146,153,228,237).…”
Section: Selection In Natural Environmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They have readily spread by conjugation and natural transformation (145,146), such that they are now found in some 40 to 70% of Gram-negative pathogens from clinical contexts (147,148). They are common in the pathogens and commensal flora of livestock and companion animals (144,149,150).…”
Section: Origin Of Class 1 Integrons As Vectors For Antibiotic Resistmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The emergence and evolution of bacterial antibiotic resistance is one of the most significant threats to current public health and the economy (1). Increases in morbidity, length of hospitalization, healthcare cost, and mortality have been attributed to infections caused by multidrug-resistant (MDR) or extensive drug resistant (XDR) superbugs, which respond poorly to antimicrobial agents (2).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PCR detected Vancomycinresistant enterococci in wastewater and in drinking water and also detected methicillin-resistance staphylococci in hospital wastewater. In another instance, the spread of antibiotic resistance genes in wastewater treatment systems and their occurrence in surface and drinking water systems were revealed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay [15].…”
Section: Wastewatermentioning
confidence: 99%