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Glyphosate Disorders Soil <i>Enchytraeid</i> Gut Microbiota and Increases Its Antibiotic Resistance Risk

Qi Zhang, Chaotang Lei, Mingkang Jin, Guoyan Qin, Yitian Yu, Danyan Qiu, Yan Wang, Ziyao Zhang, Zhenyan Zhang, Tao Lu, Willie J.G.M. Peijnenburg, Michael R. Gillings, Zi-Ang Yao, Haifeng Qian

2024Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry18 citationsDOI

Abstract

Pesticides promote the stable development of intensive global agriculture. Nevertheless, their residues in the soil can cause ecological and human health risks. Glyphosate is a popular herbicide and is generally thought to be ecologically safe and nontoxic, but this conclusion has been questioned. Herein, we investigated the interaction among soil fauna ( Enchytraeus crypticus ) exposed to glyphosate and found that glyphosate induced oxidative stress and detoxification responses in E. crypticus and disturbed their lipid metabolism and digestive systems. We further demonstrated that glyphosate disordered the gut microbiota of E. crypticus and increased the abundance of resistance determinants with significant human health risks. Empirical tests and structural equation models were then used to confirm that glyphosate could cause E. crypticus to generate reactive oxygen species, indirectly interfering with their gut microbiota. Our study provides important implications for deciphering the mechanisms of the ecotoxicity of pesticides under the challenge of worldwide pesticide contamination.

Topics & Concepts

GlyphosatePesticideEcotoxicityBiologyHuman healthDetoxification (alternative medicine)Gut floraEnvironmental chemistryEcotoxicologyFaunaSoil biologyEcologyToxicologyChemistrySoil waterToxicityEnvironmental healthBiochemistryMedicineAlternative medicineOrganic chemistryPathologyPesticide and Herbicide Environmental StudiesPharmaceutical and Antibiotic Environmental ImpactsInsect and Pesticide Research