Pesticides and other common chemical pollutants are toxic to our ‘good’ gut bacteria (Nov 2025) Industrial and agricultural chemicals exhibit antimicrobial activity against human gut bacteria in vitro Other 

Michael Harrop

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A lab-based screening has discovered over 150 common industrial chemicals, from pesticides to flame retardants, that have a toxic effect on bacteria found in the healthy human gut microbiome. Some species of gut bacteria develop antibiotic resistance as they try to resist the effects of the chemicals.

We’ve found that many chemicals designed to act only on one type of target, say insects or fungi, also affect gut bacteria.

Abstract​

Industrial and agricultural chemicals such as pesticides are often considered to have restricted biological activity. Yet, there are concerns regarding their broader toxicity range and impact on human gut microbiota.

Here we report a systematic in vitro screening to assess the impact of 1,076 pollutants, spanning diverse chemistries and indicated applications, on 22 prevalent gut bacteria. Our investigation uncovered 588 inhibitory interactions involving 168 chemicals, the majority of which were not previously reported to have antibacterial properties.

Fungicides and industrial chemicals showed the largest impact, with around 30% exhibiting anti-gut-bacterial properties. We demonstrate that the scale of our dataset enables a machine learning approach for predicting the antibacterial activity of pesticides. Mechanistically, chemical–genetic screens using transposon mutant libraries of Parabacteroides merdae and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron implicated genes involved in conserved efflux pathways, including the acrR locus, as mediators of pollutant resistance.

We also found that loss-of-function mutations in genes coding for metabolic enzymes were selected under pollutant exposure, including those for branched short-chain fatty acid biosynthesis under tetrabromobisphenol A, a flame retardant.

Taken together, our results suggest that the antibacterial activity of chemical pollutants should be considered in future studies on the microbiome and the emergence of antimicrobial resistance, as well as in toxicological assessments.
 
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