In recent years, antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has emerged as one of the most pressing global health challenges, threatening to undermine decades of medical progress. Traditionally, the focus has been on resistance propagation in clinical settings, soils, and water bodies, areas well-recognized for harboring antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). However, a groundbreaking review led by Professor Fumito Maruyama at Hiroshima University exposes a largely overlooked conduit — the air we breathe. The airborne resistome, an assemblage of ARGs present in the atmosphere, constitutes a silent but potent vector for the transmission of antimicrobial resistance, demanding urgent attention in public health frameworks worldwide.
This comprehensive review meticulously analyzes the distribution and dynamics of ARGs in urban and rural atmospheres, revealing how anthropogenic activities shape airborne microbial communities. Urban environments, with their dense populations and extensive wastewater infrastructure, are hotbeds for the release and circulation of clinically relevant ARGs into the air. Unlike water or soil, the atmospheric pathway offers a more diffuse and less monitored mode for resistance spread. Airborne dissemination occurs both via free genetic elements and as hitchhikers within microorganisms, extending the reach of resistance genes well beyond traditional confines.
Interestingly, rural air, often idealized as pristine and uncontaminated, is not exempt from ARG presence. Seasonal agricultural practices such as livestock farming, manure spreading, sludge application, and aquaculture introduce fluctuations in the air resistome’s composition. These episodic yet substantial emissions demonstrate how temporal agricultural activities influence airborne gene pools, leading to a complex and dynamic airborne resistome landscape. The review posits that every breath, irrespective of setting, could serve as a microcosm connecting human, animal, and environmental health through the shared challenge of AMR.
The study underscores that urban pollution and infrastructural elements intricately modulate the composition of the air microbiome. Pollutants not only contribute to microbial community shifts but may also select for resistant strains carrying ARGs with high clinical relevance. This phenomenon elevates airborne ARGs to a level of public health concern comparable to more traditionally monitored reservoirs. Furthermore, the variability tied to seasonal agricultural operations in rural areas implies spatial and temporal heterogeneity in exposure risks, complicating surveillance and mitigation.
Acknowledging the air as an ‘invisible library’ of ARGs builds a compelling narrative around its role as an unrecognized reservoir and transmission route for antimicrobial resistance. This metaphor highlights the silent, continuous exchange of genetic resistances among humans, animals, and ecological systems via atmospheric circulation. Currently, the lack of standardized, systematic air monitoring mechanisms across regions and seasons severely limits the scientific community’s capacity to define the scale and impact of airborne ARG spread.
To address this gap, the review advocates for the development of harmonized surveillance systems dedicated to tracking the air resistome globally. Deploying such monitoring networks in diverse urban and rural settings could illuminate patterns, facilitate risk assessments, and underpin evidence-based interventions. Integrating atmospheric resistome data into existing AMR frameworks would complement water and soil monitoring systems, creating a comprehensive picture of environmental resistome dynamics critical for policy formulation.
The complexity of airborne ARG dissemination requires interdisciplinary approaches that encompass environmental science, microbiology, agriculture, urban planning, and public health. The review presents a call-to-action for scientists, policymakers, and stakeholders to prioritize atmospheric resistome research and surveillance. The imperative lies in developing strategies that mitigate release sources, curtail dissemination pathways, and ultimately protect clinical efficacy of antibiotics through environmental stewardship.
Highlighting the international scope of this research collaboration, the team comprises experts from Japan, Nigeria, Spain, France, South Korea, and Canada, illustrating the global relevance of the air resistome challenge. Their collective insights emphasize the necessity of cross-border cooperation in tackling AMR, as atmospheric transmission knows no geopolitical boundaries. This coordinated effort could lay the groundwork for developing international health policies that incorporate atmospheric pathways alongside traditional resistance transmission routes.
Importantly, the review clarifies that airborne ARGs can impact human health not only by exposure through inhalation but also by facilitating horizontal gene transfer among environmental and commensal microbes, potentially leading to the emergence of multidrug-resistant pathogens. This multidimensional threat reinforces the urgency of incorporating airborne resistome data into clinical and environmental risk assessments.
The invisible and ubiquitous nature of ARGs in the air shatters conventional perceptions about clean air environments and challenges current environmental health paradigms. It compels a paradigm shift in how researchers and public health authorities conceive environmental reservoirs of resistance. Through advanced metagenomic and molecular epidemiological tools, future investigations will unravel the complexities of airborne resistome evolution and dissemination, providing actionable intelligence for mitigation.
As the global community wrestles with the ramifications of AMR, this review underscores the necessity of widening the investigative lens. Airborne pathways must be recognized and addressed with equal vigor and resource allocation as waterborne and soilborne routes. Only through holistic, integrated environmental monitoring and control strategies can humanity hope to stem the tide of antimicrobial resistance and safeguard the efficacy of lifesaving antibiotics for generations to come.
Subject of Research:
Airborne antibiotic resistance gene (ARG) dynamics and environmental dissemination of antimicrobial resistance in urban and rural atmospheres.
Article Title:
Air resistome in urban and rural environments – review
News Publication Date:
27-Mar-2026
Web References:
https://doi.org/10.1080/10643389.2026.2646509
References:
Maruyama, F., Saibu, S., Yarimizu, K., Perera, I. U., Yue, Y., Fujiyoshi, S., Pozdniakova, S., Amato, P., Yamamoto, N., & Rossi, F. (2026). Air resistome in urban and rural environments – review. Critical Reviews in Environmental Science and Technology. https://doi.org/10.1080/10643389.2026.2646509
Image Credits:
Fumito Maruyama/Hiroshima University
Keywords:
Airborne antimicrobial resistance, antibiotic resistance genes, air microbiome, urban pollution, rural agriculture, environmental health, antimicrobial resistance transmission, resistome surveillance, microbial ecology, public health, molecular epidemiology, atmospheric science

