dMicroorganisms are responsible for multiple antibiotic resistances that have been associated with resistance/tolerance to heavy metals, with consequences to public health. Many genes conferring these resistances are located on mobile genetic elements, easily exchanged among phylogenetically distant bacteria. The objective of the present work was to isolate arsenic-, antimonite-, and antibiotic-resistant strains and to determine the existence of plasmids harboring antibiotic/arsenic/antimonite resistance traits in phenotypically resistant strains, in a nonanthropogenically impacted environment. The hydrothermal Lucky Strike field in the Azores archipelago (North Atlantic, between 11°N and 38°N), at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, protected under the OSPAR Convention, was sampled as a metal-rich pristine environment. A total of 35 strains from 8 different species were isolated in the presence of arsenate, arsenite, and antimonite. ACR3 and arsB genes were amplified from the sediment's total DNA, and 4 isolates also carried ACR3 genes. Phenotypic multiple resistances were found in all strains, and 7 strains had recoverable plasmids. Purified plasmids were sequenced by Illumina and assembled by EDENA V3, and contig annotation was performed using the "Rapid Annotation using the Subsystems Technology" server. Determinants of resistance to copper, zinc, cadmium, cobalt, and chromium as well as to the antibiotics -lactams and fluoroquinolones were found in the 3 sequenced plasmids. Genes coding for heavy metal resistance and antibiotic resistance in the same mobile element were found, suggesting the possibility of horizontal gene transfer and distribution of theses resistances in the bacterial population.T he ocean floor near the Azores is constituted in part by the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and a series of extensive hydrothermal vents. The largest hydrothermal vent field known at this time is located at 37°18.5=N, 32°16.5=W, averages 1,700 m in depth, and is named "Lucky Strike" (1). Here, 21 active hydrothermal vents are connected to the thermal anomalies in the subsea floor at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge that are spread over 150 km 2 . The field is primarily made of basalt but also spikes interest due to rich deposits of ores. Temperatures of the field vary from 170°to 324°C (2), diminishing with the distance from the vent outlet due to water circularization with the surrounding cold temperatures characteristic of these depths (around 4°C), which therefore harbor a distinct microbial community. Furthermore, hydrothermal activity at Lucky Strike seems to have been episodic over a long time (2).The nature of the bedrock and the geological events at Lucky Strike vent sites result in smaller concentrations of Rn and heavy metals (Cd, Hg, Cu, Pb, Zn, Fe, and Ag) and less acidic fluids, making it one of the least extreme environments, in a biological perspective, of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge compared to neighboring vent sites (3).Antibiotics in the environment may result from adaptive phenotypic and genotypic responses of the microbiota. Recen...