Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Scientists discover antibiotic-resistant bacteria in Antarctica

- SANTIAGO / REUTERS

WITH developmen­ts in medicine gaining pivotal speed in the 21st century, what scientists have been most worried about has been diseases that can become antibiotic-resistant. So, it was an intriguing and eyebrow-raising developmen­t when bacteria in Antarctica were discovered with genes that give them natural antibiotic and antimicrob­ial resistance and have the potential to spread out of the polar regions, according to scientists in Chile.

Andres Marcoleta, a researcher from the University of Chile who headed the study published in the Science of the Total Environmen­t journal in March, said that these “superpower­s” which evolved to resist extreme conditions are contained in mobile DNA fragments that can easily be transferre­d to other bacteria.

“We know that the soils of the Antarctic Peninsula, one of the polar areas most impacted by melting ice, host a great diversity of bacteria,” Marcoleta said. “And that some of them constitute a potential source of ancestral genes that confer resistance to antibiotic­s.” Scientists from the University of Chile collected several samples from the Antarctic Peninsula from 2017 to 2019.

“It is worth asking whether climate change could have an impact on the occurrence of infectious diseases,” Marcoleta said.

“In a possible scenario, these genes could leave this reservoir and promote the emergence and proliferat­ion of infectious diseases.”

Researcher­s found that the Pseudomona­s bacteria, one of the predominan­t bacteria groups in the Antarctic Peninsula, are not pathogenic but can be a source of “resistance genes,” which are not stopped by common disinfecta­nts such as copper, chlorine or quaternary ammonium.

However, the other kind of bacteria they researched, Polaromona­s bacteria, does have the “potential to inactivate beta-lactam type antibiotic­s, which are essential for the treatment of different infections,” Marcoleta said.

 ?? ?? Scientists from the University of Chile collect organic material as they look for a bacteria discovered in Antarctica, Jan. 13, 2019.
Scientists from the University of Chile collect organic material as they look for a bacteria discovered in Antarctica, Jan. 13, 2019.

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