“…Ecological niches in which plasmid-encoded TIG resistance tet (X) genes have been detected are shown in Table 1 . Clearly, there is increasing evidence of plasmid-encoded TIG resistance tet (X) genes reported in countries across Europe, Asia, United States, South America, and Africa involving humans, food animals, including chickens, pigs, ducks, pigeons, geese, and cattle, as well as companion animals, food animal products (meats), aquaculture and environment such as soil, livestock-farm water, wastewaters, sewages, and wildlife as reservoirs of MTR ( Bai et al, 2019 ; Chen et al, 2019a , b , 2020 , 2021 ; He et al, 2019 ; Sun C. et al, 2019 , 2020 ; Sun J. et al, 2019 ; Cao et al, 2020 ; Cui et al, 2020 , 2021b ; Ding et al, 2020 ; Du et al, 2020 ; He T. et al, 2020 ; Li et al, 2020 , 2021f ; Ma et al, 2020 ; Pan et al, 2020 ; Ruan et al, 2020 ; Song et al, 2020 ; Wang et al, 2020a , b ; Zhang et al, 2020b , 2021 ; Zheng et al, 2020 ; Cheng et al, 2021a , b ; Feng et al, 2021 ; Hirabayashi et al, 2021a , b ; Hsieh et al, 2021 ; Li et al, 2021e , f ; Lu et al, 2021 ; Marathe et al, 2021 ; Martelli et al, 2021 ; Mohsin et al, 2021 ; Soliman et al, 2021 ; Sun et al, 2021a , b ; Tang et al, 2021 ; Wang et al, 2021f , g ; Xu et al, 2021 ; Yu Y. et al, 2021 ; Wu et al, 2022 ; Zhai et al, 2022 ). We further demonstrate this, through the specific reservoirs in which plasmid-borne transmissible tet (X) and tmexCD-toprJ genes have been detected as shown in Table 2 .…”