CO2 promotes the conjugative transfer of multiresistance genes by facilitating cellular contact and plasmid transfer

2019 
Abstract The dissemination of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs), especially via the plasmid-mediated conjugation, is becoming a pervasive global health threat. This study reported that this issue can be worse by CO 2 , as increased CO 2 was found to facilitate the conjugative transfer of ARGs carried on plasmid RP4 by 2.4–9.0 and 1.3–3.8 fold within and across genera, respectively. Mechanistic studies revealed that CO 2 benefitted the cell-to-cell contact by increasing cell surface hydrophobicity and decreasing cell surface charge, both of which resulted in the reduced intercellular repulsion. Besides, the transcriptional expression of genes responsible for global regulator ( korA , korB and trbA ), plasmid transfer and replication system ( trfAp ), and mating pair formation system ( traF and traG ) were all influenced by CO 2 , facilitating the mobilization and channel transfer of plasmid. Furthermore, the presence of CO 2 induced the release of intracellular Ca 2+ and increased the transmembrane potential of recipients, which contributed to the increased proton motive force (PMF), providing more power for DNA uptake. This is the first study addressing the potential risks of increased CO 2 on the propagation of ARGs, which provides a new insight into the concerns of anthropogenic CO 2 emissions and CO 2 storage.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    69
    References
    19
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []