26 January 2012 by Debora MacKenzie Magazine issue 2849
BACTERIA that can resist nearly all antibiotics have been found in Antarctic seawater.
Björn Olsen of Uppsala University in Sweden and colleagues took seawater samples between 10 and 300 metres away from Chile's Antarctic research stations, Bernardo O'Higgins, Arturo Prat and Fildes Bay. A quarter of the samples of Escherichia coli bacteria carried genes that made an enzyme called ESBL, which can destroy penicillin, cephalosporins and related antibiotics (Applied and Environmental Microbiology, DOI: 10.1128/AEM.07320-11 [ http://aem.asm.org/content/early/2012/01/06/AEM.07320-11 ( http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.07320-11 )]).
The type of ESBL they found, called CTX-M, is common in bacteria in people, and the Uppsala study found that concentrations of resistant bacteria were higher close to the sewage outfalls from the stations. Some Antarctic stations started shipping out human faeces for incineration after gut bacteria were found nearby. Chile's research stations have virtually no sewage treatment in place, says Olsen.
Recent work shows the bacteria may hang on to the genes for CTX-M even when no longer exposed to antibiotics [ http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20749-superbugs-may-be-here-to-stay.html ], suggesting that superbugs can survive in the wild, with animals acting as a reservoir. Penguins near the Chilean stations have been checked and are free of ESBL, though Olsen is now looking at the area's gulls as he has found ESBL-producing bugs in gulls in France.
"If these genes are in Antarctica, it's an indication of how far this [problem] has gone," he says.
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