PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Antibiotic resistance is ancient, ecological, and deeply connected to human activity, new review shows

2025-12-18
(Press-News.org) Antibiotic resistance genes are often portrayed as a modern medical problem driven by the overuse of antibiotics in hospitals and farms. A new comprehensive review published in Biocontaminant reveals a much deeper and more complex story. Antibiotic resistance is an ancient feature of microbial life, shaped by millions of years of evolution and strongly influenced by today’s human activities that connect natural environments, animals, and people.

The study, led by researchers at Hohai University in China, examines where antibiotic resistance genes come from, why they persist in nature, and how human actions are accelerating their movement into disease causing bacteria. Framed through a One Health perspective, the review highlights the tight links between environmental health, animal health, and public health.

“Antibiotic resistance did not begin with modern medicine,” said corresponding author Guoxiang You. “Many resistance genes originally evolved to help bacteria survive environmental stresses, long before humans discovered antibiotics. The real danger today comes from how human activities are breaking down natural barriers and allowing these genes to spread into pathogens.”

The authors explain that many resistance genes are derived from ordinary bacterial genes with essential physiological roles, such as pumping out toxic substances or transporting nutrients. Over evolutionary time, these genes gained the ability to defend against antibiotics as a secondary function. In undisturbed ecosystems like soils, lakes, and remote environments, most resistance genes remain locked within specific microbial communities and pose little risk to human health.

A key reason for this containment is genomic incompatibility. Bacteria that are genetically very different often cannot easily exchange and use resistance genes. This natural mismatch acts as a biological firewall, limiting the spread of resistance across species and habitats.

However, human activity is weakening this firewall.

The review highlights how agriculture, wastewater discharge, urbanization, and global trade increase connectivity between environments that were once separate. Antibiotics used in medicine and livestock create strong selection pressures, while manure application, wastewater reuse, and environmental pollution bring together bacteria from soil, animals, and humans. These conditions make it easier for resistance genes to jump into disease causing microbes.

“Human driven habitat connectivity changes everything,” said lead author Yi Xu. “When bacteria from different environments are repeatedly brought into contact under antibiotic pressure, resistance genes that were once harmless can become a serious public health threat.”

Wastewater treatment plants are identified as critical hotspots, where high bacterial densities and residual antibiotics promote gene exchange. Agricultural soils fertilized with manure can also act as bridges, allowing resistance genes to move from livestock into environmental bacteria and eventually back to humans through food, water, or direct contact.

Importantly, the authors stress that not all resistance genes are equally dangerous. High abundance in the environment does not automatically mean high risk. Understanding which genes are mobile, compatible with human pathogens, and linked to disease is essential for effective monitoring and control.

The review calls for ecosystem centered strategies to combat antibiotic resistance. These include reducing unnecessary antibiotic use, improving wastewater treatment technologies, managing manure and sludge more carefully, and protecting relatively pristine ecosystems that serve as baselines for natural resistance levels.

“Antibiotic resistance is not just a medical issue,” You said. “It is an ecological problem rooted in how we interact with the environment. Protecting antibiotics for future generations requires protecting ecosystem integrity today.”

By integrating evolutionary biology, microbial ecology, and environmental science, the authors argue that a One Health approach offers the most realistic path forward in addressing one of the greatest global health challenges of our time.

 

=== 

Journal reference: Xu Y, Wang J, Fu T, Yang S, You G, et al. 2025. Evolutionary origins, ecological drivers, and environmental implications of antibiotic resistance genes proliferation and dissemination: a 'One Health' perspective. Biocontaminant 1: e014  

https://www.maxapress.com/article/doi/10.48130/biocontam-0025-0014  

=== 

About Biocontaminant:
Biocontaminant is a multidisciplinary platform dedicated to advancing fundamental and applied research on biological contaminants across diverse environments and systems. The journal serves as an innovative, efficient, and professional forum for global researchers to disseminate findings in this rapidly evolving field.

Follow us on Facebook, X, and Bluesky. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Vapes, pouches, heated tobacco, shisha, cigarettes: nicotine in all forms is toxic to the heart and blood vessels

2025-12-18
Nicotine is toxic to the heart and blood vessels, regardless of whether it is consumed via a vape, a pouch, a shisha or a cigarette, according to an expert consensus report published in the European Heart Journal [1] today (Thursday). The report brings together the results of the entire literature in the field and is the first to consider the harms of all nicotine products, rather than smoking only. The report highlights a dramatic rise in the use of vapes, heated tobacco and nicotine pouches, particularly among adolescents and young adults, with evidence that three-quarters of young adult vapers have never smoked before. The authors ...

From powder to planet: University of Modena engineers forge a low-carbon future for advanced metal manufacturing

2025-12-18
What if the factories building tomorrow’s aerospace components, medical devices, and clean energy systems could do so without fueling the climate crisis? That future is now within reach—thanks to groundbreaking research from Dr. Giulia Colombini at the Department of Engineering “Enzo Ferrari,” University of Modena and Reggio Emilia. Laser powder bed fusion of metals (PBF-LB/M) has long been celebrated for its extraordinary precision and near-zero material waste. By selectively melting fine metal powder with a high-powered laser, it creates complex, high-performance ...

Super strain-resistant superconductors

2025-12-18
Kyoto, Japan -- Superconductors are materials that can conduct electricity with zero resistance, usually only at very low temperatures. Most superconductors behave according to well-established rules, but strontium ruthenate, Sr₂RuO₄, has defied clear understanding since its superconducting properties were discovered in 1994. It is considered one of the cleanest and best-studied unconventional superconductors, yet scientists still debate the precise structure and symmetry of the electron pairing that gives rise to its remarkable ...

Pre-school health programme does not improve children’s diet or physical activity, prompting call for policy changes, study finds

2025-12-18
A pre-school diet and physical activity programme does not improve children’s calorie intake or overall physical activity levels in nursery settings, a new University of Bristol-led study has found.  The research published in The Lancet Regional Health - Europe today [17 December] highlights the need for policy-led rather than intervention-led approaches to improving young children’s health. The NAP SACC UK programme (Nutrition and Physical Activity Self-Assessment for Child Care), funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), adapted from an established US model, aimed to improve nutrition and physical activity policies, ...

Autumn clock change linked to reduction in certain health conditions

2025-12-18
The week after the autumn clock change is associated with a reduction in demand for NHS services for sleep disorders, cardiovascular disease, anxiety, depression, and psychiatric conditions in England, finds a study in the Christmas issue of The BMJ. However, there is little evidence that the spring clock change has any short term effect on the number of health conditions, say the researchers. Daylight saving time was introduced during the first world war and involves moving the clocks one hour forward in spring and one ...

AI images of doctors can exaggerate and reinforce existing stereotypes

2025-12-18
AI generated images of doctors have the potential to exaggerate and reinforce existing stereotypes relating to sex, gender, race, and ethnicity, suggests a small analysis in the Christmas issue of The BMJ. Sati Heer-Stavert, GP and associate clinical professor at the University of Warwick, says AI generated images of doctors “should be carefully prompted and aligned against workforce statistics to reduce disparity between the real and the rendered.” Inaccurate portrayals of doctors in the media and everyday imagery ...

Where medicine meets melody – how lullabies help babies and parents in intensive care

2025-12-18
Playing soothing live music in intensive care units not only helps parents bond with their baby but also provides a moment’s respite from an uncertain and stressful situation, says a senior doctor in the Christmas issue of The BMJ. In 2025, Music in Hospitals & Care has delivered more than 90 hours of live music to neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) in the UK, reaching more than 1000 seriously ill babies. The charity has been providing soothing tunes for babies and parents through its Lullaby Hour sessions since 2017, ...

We may never be able to tell if AI becomes conscious, argues philosopher

2025-12-18
The only reasonable stance on conscious AI is “agnosticism”: that we won’t, and may never, be able to tell, says a philosophy-of-consciousness expert.    This gulf in our knowledge could be exploited by a tech industry intent on selling the “next level of AI cleverness”, argues Dr Tom McClelland.   “If you have an emotional connection with something premised on it being conscious and it’s not, that has the potential to be existentially toxic.” A University of Cambridge philosopher argues that our evidence for what constitutes consciousness is far too limited to tell if or when artificial intelligence has made the leap ...

AI video translation shows promise but humans still hold the edge

2025-12-18
AI video translation is not yet a perfect substitute for human translation, according to new research from the University of East Anglia. A new study shows that AI tools can be useful when speed and clarity are priorities. But human translators remain crucial for tone, cultural nuance and for sounding natural. Jiseon Han, a lecturer in digital marketing at UEA’s Norwich Business School, said: “As brands race to reach global consumers on platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, a new question has emerged - can generative AI truly replace humans in video translation? “We decided to put it to ...

Deep ocean earthquakes drive Southern Ocean’s massive phytoplankton blooms, study finds

2025-12-17
Stanford researchers have uncovered evidence that deep underwater earthquakes can spur the growth of massive phytoplankton blooms at the ocean surface. Phytoplankton are microscopic, plant-like organisms that float in upper ocean layers and serve as the foundation of the oceanic food chain. They also store carbon dioxide pulled from the air and supply a large amount of the planet’s oxygen. The new findings, published Dec. 9 in Nature Geoscience, point to a previously unknown relationship ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

iPS cells from dish to freezer and back

Deep neural networks enable accurate pricing of American options under stochastic volatility

Collective risk resonance in Chinese stock sectors uncovered through higher-order network analysis

Does CPU impact systemic risk contributions of Chinese sectors? Evidence from mixed frequency methods with asymmetric tail long memory

General intelligence framework to predict virus adaptation based on a genome language model

Antibiotic resistance is ancient, ecological, and deeply connected to human activity, new review shows

Vapes, pouches, heated tobacco, shisha, cigarettes: nicotine in all forms is toxic to the heart and blood vessels

From powder to planet: University of Modena engineers forge a low-carbon future for advanced metal manufacturing

Super strain-resistant superconductors

Pre-school health programme does not improve children’s diet or physical activity, prompting call for policy changes, study finds

Autumn clock change linked to reduction in certain health conditions

AI images of doctors can exaggerate and reinforce existing stereotypes

Where medicine meets melody – how lullabies help babies and parents in intensive care

We may never be able to tell if AI becomes conscious, argues philosopher

AI video translation shows promise but humans still hold the edge

Deep ocean earthquakes drive Southern Ocean’s massive phytoplankton blooms, study finds

Without campus leftovers to pick through, the beaks of this bird changed shape during the pandemic

High-dose antibiotic does not reduce mortality in tuberculous meningitis

How many insects fly in the sky above the USA?

Could cheese protect your brain health?

Who faces more difficulty recovering from stroke?

Colliding galaxies create the brightest, fastest growing black holes at their center

New BrainHealth research reveals tradeoffs on sleep with cannabis use for chronic pain

Aging-US now on ResearchGate, enhancing visibility for authors and readers

'Molecular glue' stabilizes protein that inhibits development of non-small cell lung cancer

Mount Sinai Health System is recognized in 2025 Chime Digital Health Most Wired survey

From prey to predator: How carnivores spread beneficial fungi

Menopause symptoms may be frequent and have negative effects, according to female endurance athletes

US Congressmembers’ responses on X to mass shooting events differ along party lines

KAIST-UEL team develops “origami” airless wheel to explore lunar caves

[Press-News.org] Antibiotic resistance is ancient, ecological, and deeply connected to human activity, new review shows