Here’s Some New Dirt on an Unusual Source of Antibiotic Resistance
It’s one of the highest-stakes battles on earth: bacteria versus antibiotics.
And in the human realm, bacteria appear to be gaining ground. Worldwide, many antibiotics are starting to lose their bite. About 1 in 6 human infections tested in labs are resistant to antibiotics, contributing to over 4 million deaths a year.
Researchers know that human use, and especially overuse, have given bacteria opportunities to develop resistance. But antibiotics, and resistance to them, are much older than the pills we pop for infections. Both are the product of one of the longest-running battles on Earth, playing out in soil.
“In nature, organisms are duking it out, it’s a competitive environment,” says Dianne Newman, a microbiologist at Cal Tech. “One of the strategies microbes have evolved to effectively compete is to produce antibiotics, to kill their neighbors.”

