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. 2020 Jan 16;12(1):1700755. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2019.1700755

Table 1.

Summary of studies included in this review.

Ref. Country(ies) Sample size Method(s) ARG (N)a Pipeline(s) Reference Database(s) Key findings Limitations
4 Canada 24 SeqMeta 13,218 RAY Meta 2.2.1 MERGEM Culture-enrichment in prior to sequencing allows identification of core and accessory ARGs in rare gut microbial species. Enrichment step has eliminated otherwise prevalent Akkermansia and Prevotella.
5 Demark, Spain 663 SeqMeta 6,095 Prodigal, CD-HIT v4.5.7 Resfinder, ARG-ANNOT, Lahey Clinic, RED-DB The predicted ARGs had 29.8% amino acid identity to known ARGs, supporting ARG transfer between microbes is rare. ARGs in the subdominant microbial species and that non-homologous to the known ARG classes may be missed.
6 Tanzania, Italy 38 SeqMeta 2,570 TBLASTN ARDB; ResFams The gut resistome of the Hadza hunter-gatherer resembles the soil, with less syntenic mobile elements than that of the Italian. Survey of ARGs was limited to known genes. Functional validation was not performed.
7 Syria, Iraq, Iran, Eritrea, Afghanistan, Germany 606 Mf-PCR 42 NA NA Refugees had more than five ARGs, with high prevalence of blaCTX-MblaSHVblaoxa-1vanC1, and qnrB. German had three or less ARGs. Mobility of the ARGs were not investigated and thus their transferability was unclear.
8 China, Denmark, Spain 162 SeqMeta; FunMeta 1,093 BLASTx ARDB Chinese had the highest abundance of ARGs, which are phylogenetically distant from others. The limited samples may not reflect population-wide profile.
13 USA, China, Spain, Denmark 1,267 SeqMeta 112 BLASTx, SOAP ARDB, ARG-ANNOT ARG composition was similar among all population studied. Chinese had the highest ARG abundance than others. Insufficient epidemiologic data that supported gut ARG being affected by antibiotic policy.
14 The Netherlands 122 PCR 10 NA NCBI The prevalence of blaCTX-M, qnrB and qnrS increased from 6.6% to 9% before travel to 33.6% to 55.7% after international travel. Small study population size precluded risk analysis.
15 China 77 Microarray 2,915 NA ARDB ARG diversity is related to age. False-positive or -negative hybridization signals may exist.
16 The Netherlands 10 Mf-PCR 81 NA ResFinder, NCBI The catA and tetW genes were more abundant in healthy subjects than the critically ill. The findings may not apply to countries where resistant bacteria is prevalent.
17 Canada 70 Microarray 254 NA CARD, ResFinder, ARG-ANNOT Gut resistome in healthy adults showed prompt recovery to baseline in one week after antibiotic perturbation. The microarray did not include all known ARGs.
18 The Netherlands 1,179 SeqMeta 11 ShortBRED CARD Females had higher diversity of ARGs and prevalence of lnu genes. Small number of male subjects may be underpowered.
19 Peru 263 SeqMeta 1,100 ShortBRED CARD, Lahey The resistome from human gut and their associated animals and environment are shared No functional validation of the ARGs identified.
20 China, Europe, USA 2,768 SeqMeta 19,569 SOAP-denovo ResFinder Mobile resistomes are mainly found, in order of frequency, in Proteobacteria (399 genes), Firmicutes (86), Bacteroidetes (46), and Actinobacteria (40). Nucleotide identity cutoff was set at 95% against ResFinder.
21 Caucasian male 12 SeqMeta NA CARD-RGI CARD,
ResFams,
Healthy subjects with glycopeptide or aminoglycoside resistance genes were prone to de novo colonization upon antibiotic exposure. The annotation algorithm was conservative.
22 UK, France, Italy, Finland, Norway, Scotland 22 Microarray; FunMeta NA Chromas, DNAMAN NCBI The tet(W) gene and transposons Tn4451 and Tn1549 were highly prevalent in fecal metagenomes. Only tetracycline and erythromycin resistance genes were investigated.
23 Finland, France, Italy, Norway, UK 100 PCR; Microarray; FunMeta 97 NA NA ARGs identified by microarray were not recovered by functional screen. Combining these methods increase the identifiable ARG repertoire. The cloned ARG in functional screen needs to be expressive in the heterologous host.
25 11 countries 180 SeqMeta 1,209 ARGs-OAP SARG The ermF was the representative macrolide resistant gene in the Chinese population. Bacterial hosts of ARGs were predicted by network analysis.
28 Denmark, Spain, USA 252 SeqMeta 3,496 MOCAT ARDB The most prevalent human gut ARGs were those that encoded resistance to antibiotics used in animals in a country-specific manner. Only three developed countries were involved.
29 USA 2 FunMeta NA NA NCBI Half of the resistance genes recovered from aerobic gut isolates were identical to that in pathogens. The majority of gut commensals was anaerobic.
30 Germany 2 SeqMeta NA DIAMOND CARD The gut resistome in two persons changed differently in response to ciprofloxacin treatment. Given sequence reads did not span the whole ARG length, its frequency could not be identified.
31 USA 29 SeqMeta 21 Prodigal, BLASTP DeepARG Sixty four ARGs were shared amongst the gut resistomes from chickens, pigs and humans. The genetic contexts of the ARGs were unclear.
32 Malawi, USA, Venezuela 110 SeqMeta 70 BLAST+ ARDB, ResFams Antibiotic resistance and virulence genes are correlated and may be co-selected. Results were based on sequence analysis without downstream laboratory validation.

aNumber of antibiotic resistance genes (ARG) surveyed or annotated; FunMeta, functional metagenomics; Marilyn, Marilyn Robert’s website for macrolides and tetracycline resistance genes; MERGEM, Mobile Elements and Resistance Genes Enhanced for Metagenomics; Mf-PCR, microfluidic PCR; PATRIC, Pathosystems Resource Integration Center; Ref, reference; SeqMeta, sequence-based metagenomics; SOAP, short oligonucleotide analysis package.