
Microplastics are a real problem. They are pretty much everywhere. They are in our food, in the oceans, on mountains, up in the clouds, and most alarmingly, in our bodies. All of that is already bad news, but researchers at Boston University have found that microplastics may also be contributing to antibiotic resistance in dangerous bacteria.
The researchers observed that bacteria exposed to microplastics become resistant to multiple types of antibiotics commonly used to treat infections. Bacteria can become resistant to antibiotics for a number of reasons, including misuse and overprescribing of medications. However, a major factor influencing antibiotic resistance is the microenvironment – the immediate surroundings of a microbe – which is where bacteria and viruses replicate.
The Boston University study tested how the common bacterium E. coli reacted to being in a closed environment with microplastics. The plastics provide a surface that the bacteria can attach to and colonize. When attached to a surface, bacteria create a sticky substance called a biofilm that acts like a shield, protecting the bacteria and keeping them affixed securely. The tests showed that microplastics supercharged the biofilms so much that when antibiotics were introduced, they were unable to penetrate the shield.
Microplastics are everywhere, but they are especially prevalent in impoverished places where sanitation may be limited. Refugees, asylum seekers, and forcibly displaced populations are already at increased risk of contracting drug-resistant infections. The prevalence of microplastics adds another risk to the already difficult lives of these people.
**********
Web Links
Microplastics Could Be Fueling Antibiotic Resistance, BU Study Finds
Photo, posted May 15, 2021, courtesy of Felton Davis via Flickr.
Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio
Leave a Reply