<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/news/in-soil-death-doesnt-stop-the-spread-of-antibiotic-resistance.aspx" dsn="blogs"><homehero>true</homehero><unit>Faculty &amp; Staff,Research,College of Natural Science,EEB,Integrative Biology,Kellogg Biological Station</unit><pubDate>04/08/2022</pubDate><title>In soil, death doesn't stop the spread of antibiotic resistance</title><description><p>Dead bacteria can still make their presence felt in the land of the living. New research led by Michigan State University integrative biologists is showing that this could have big implications for antibiotic resistance on farms. The results were recently published in the journal <em>Applied and Environmental Microbiology</em>.</p></description><author/><hero-image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/85C8A072-A472-4D1F-9A859C3D2ED307C7_newsarticlehero.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></hero-image><image><img src="https://natsci.msu.edu/sites/_natsci/cache/file/85C8A072-A472-4D1F-9A859C3D2ED307C7_medium.jpg" alt="Hero image"/></image><tags><tag>DNA</tag><tag>antibiotic resistance transfer</tag><tag>dead bacterica</tag><tag>faculty</tag><tag>farms</tag><tag>graduate students</tag><tag>research</tag></tags></item>