Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • "Antibiotic Resistance Genes in the Guts of Vegetarians vs. Meat-Eaters"

  • There are nearly a million salmonella and campylobacter infections

  • in children 10 and younger each year in the United States.

  • Some of these infections are severe, causing meningitis and death, and

  • requiring treatment with antibiotics. The problem is that there's

  • an increasing problem of antibiotic resistance among

  • these bugs that threatens our ability to treat them.

  • Part of the problem is that the same life-saving miracle-drug antibiotics

  • are being squandered for use in food animals

  • for things like growth promotion

  • in such unhygienic, crowded conditions,

  • which increases the likelihood that pathogens like salmonella

  • or campylobacter will become resistant,

  • and I've done a bunch of videos on that.

  • But there's another problem. The resistance determinants,

  • the genes that encode antibiotic resistance,

  • may be transmitted from food animals to humans through the food supply.

  • See, most resistant bacteria have mobile genetic elements,

  • like these little circles of DNA called plasmids,

  • that carry the resistance genes that they can then pass on

  • to other bacteria, including those in our own gut.

  • Food animals are, therefore, a reservoir of antibiotic resistance

  • genes and a potential vector for transmission

  • of antibiotic resistance genes to the human intestinal microbiome.

  • In this study, transfer of an antibiotic resistance plasmid

  • from an E. coli originating from a chicken raised for meat

  • to human gut bugs was assessed by using a model

  • that mimics the human intestines. And it happened within two hours.

  • This spread of antibiotic resistance genes presents an alarming scenario,

  • a growing concern that antibiotic resistant bacteria present on food

  • can transfer their resistance genes to the inherent gut microbiome

  • of the consumer.

  • But you don't know until you put it to the test.

  • Assessing antibiotic resistance gene loads in vegan vs. vegetarian

  • vs. omnivore gut bacteria.

  • You'd think the results might be obvious,

  • but antibiotic resistance genes are spread due to

  • manure application on agricultural fields of fruits and vegetables.

  • Yes, massive antibiotic use in animal farming is considered

  • as the greatest contributor to the presence of antibiotic-resistant

  • bacteria in food of animal origin: meats, eggs, and dairy.

  • Nevertheless, sewage from treated animals may impact

  • on vegetables grown on fertilized fields,

  • but it was largely unknown whether, and to what extent,

  • antibiotic-resistant bacteria are being transferred to vegetables

  • and then to the human gut until now.

  • Researchers looked for antibiotic- resistant genes against sulfa drugs

  • like bactrim, tetracyclines, penicillins and cephalosporins,

  • and streptomycin-type antibiotics

  • and both omnivores and vegetarians showed a signigicantly higher

  • antibiotic-resistant gene load in their guts

  • as compared with vegans.

  • There wasn't a significant difference between omnivores and vegetarians,

  • but significantly lower loads in vegans compared to omnivores,

  • and vegans compared to vegetarians, the first evidence

  • that a vegan lifestyle is associated with

  • a reduced load of human gut antibiotic-resistant genes,

  • but not the last.

  • Fewer tetracycline resistance genes in vegan guts and

  • more vancomycin resistance genes in the guts of those who eat meat.

  • No surprise, since they found a correlation between

  • tetracycline resistance genes

  • and the intake of eggs, milk, and cheese ---

  • I like how there are so many types of milk these days

  • they have to specify "milk from animal sources."

  • And a higher incidence of vancomycin resistance genes

  • was found in consumers of eggs, poultry, fish, and seafood.

  • And vancomycin is one of our antibiotics of last resort, used to

  • treat serious life-threatening strep and staph infections

  • like MRSA (M-R-S-A).

  • Despite the links to dairy and eggs, just cutting out meat

  • has indeed been shown to offer an advantage in some studies,

  • as bacteria obtained from meat-eater poop samples showed resistance

  • to a greater number of antibiotics and carried more tested

  • antibiotic resistance genes compared to the vegan or vegetarian poop.

"Antibiotic Resistance Genes in the Guts of Vegetarians vs. Meat-Eaters"

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it