Microbial interactions with pharmaceutical pollutants: Implications for biodegradation and antibiotic resistance.
Karishma S, Shyam Kumar S, Deivayanai VC, Saravanan A, Yaashikaa PR
Antibiotic Resistance
Antibiotic-laced runoff from farms and cities soaks into the same soil and groundwater your garden vegetables draw from, quietly breeding drug-resistant bacteria that can end up on your plate.
Medicines we flush down toilets or that wash off farm fields end up in rivers and soil, where they don't just sit harmlessly — they push bacteria to become resistant to antibiotics, which is a growing health crisis. The good news is that certain bacteria can actually eat and neutralize these drug molecules. Scientists are studying how to use these microbes as a natural cleanup crew for polluted water and land.
Key Findings
Pharmaceutical pollutants including antibiotics, steroids, and endocrine disruptors are accumulating persistently in aquatic systems through continuous wastewater discharge.
Exposure to pharmaceutical pollutants actively selects for antibiotic resistance genes in environmental microbial communities, accelerating the spread of drug-resistant organisms.
Specific microbial strains can mineralize and transform pharmaceutical compounds through dedicated metabolic pathways, and co-metabolic approaches show enhanced degradation efficiency.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Pharmaceutical drugs flushed into waterways aren't just disappearing — bacteria are evolving to resist antibiotics because of them, while some microbes can actually break these drugs down. Researchers reviewed how microbial communities respond to pharmaceutical pollution and how we might harness that ability to clean contaminated water and soil.
Abstract Preview
Pharmaceutical pollutants, including antibiotics, analgesics, steroids, and endocrine disruptors, are emerging as persistent pollutants in aquatic systems. Their continuous discharge through wastew...
open_in_new Read full abstractAbstract copyright held by the original publisher.
Was this useful?
Ancient DNA Reveals Pre-Columbian Amazonian Forest Management at Scale
Forests and fruits we romanticize as wild — including many plants now in our kitchens and gardens — may exist in their current abundance precisely because an...