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Another New Preprint! Understanding the genomic locations of antibiotic resistance genes

Taylor and Ashley, with collaborators Adina and Jin at Iowa State, have a new pre-print out on the bioRXiv this week.

RefSoil+: A reference for antimicrobial resistance genes on soil plasmids

by Taylor K. Dunivin, Jinlyung Choi, Adina Chuang Howe, and Ashley Shade.

Plasmids harbor transferable genes that contribute to the functional repertoire of microbial communities, yet their contributions to metagenomes are often overlooked. Environmental plasmids have the potential to spread antibiotic resistance to clinical microbial strains. In soils, high microbiome diversity and high variability in plasmid characteristics present a challenge for studying plasmids. To improve understanding of soil plasmids, we present RefSoil+, a database containing plasmid sequences from 922 soil microorganisms. Soil plasmids were relatively larger than other described plasmids, which is a trait associated with plasmid mobility. There was no relationship between chromosome size and plasmid size or number, suggesting that these genomic traits are independent in soil. Soil-associated plasmids, but not chromosomes, had fewer antibiotic resistance genes than other microorganisms. These data suggest that soils may offer limited opportunity for plasmid-mediated transfer of described antibiotic resistance genes. RefSoil+ can serve as a baseline for the diversity, composition, and host-associations of plasmid-borne functional genes in soil, a utility that will be enhanced as the database expands. Our study improves understanding of soil plasmids and provides a resource for assessing the dynamics of the genes that they carry, especially genes conferring antibiotic resistances.

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