Department of Biology, Texas Southern University, 3100, Cleburne St, Houston, TX 77099, United States.
DeBakey High School for Health Professions, 3100 Shenandoah St, Houston, TX 77021, United States.
Sci Total Environ. 2015 Dec 15;538:949-58. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.08.063. Epub 2015 Sep 28.
Within the last decade, many studies have highlighted the radical changes in the components of indoor and outdoor dust. For example, agents like automobile emitted platinum group elements and different kinds of organic phthalates and esters have been reported to be accumulating in the biosphere. Humans consistently face dermal, respiratory, and dietary exposures to these particles while indoors and outdoors. In fact, dust particulate matter has been associated with close to 500,000 deaths per year in Europe and about 200,000 deaths per year in the United States. To date, there has been limited examination of the physiological impact of indoor and outdoor dust exposure on normal flora microbes. In this study, the effect of indoor- and outdoor-dust exposure on three opportunistic bacterial species (Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa) was assessed. Specifically, bacterial growth, oxidative stress resistance, and biofilm production were measured following indoor- and outdoor-dust exposures. Studies were conducted in nutritionally-rich and -poor environments typically encountered by bacteria. Surprisingly, indoor-dust (200μg/mL), enhanced the growth of all three bacterial species in nutrient-poor conditions, but slowed growth in nutrient-rich conditions. In nutrient-rich medium, 100μg/mL exposure of either indoor- or outdoor-dust resulted in significantly reduced oxidative stress resistance in E. coli. Most interestingly, dust (indoor and outdoor), either in nutrient-rich or -poor conditions, significantly increased biofilm production in all three bacterial species. These data suggest that indoor and outdoor dust, can modify opportunistic bacteria through altering growth, sensitivity to oxidative stress, and their virulence potential through enhanced biofilm formation.
在过去的十年中,许多研究都强调了室内和室外灰尘成分的根本变化。例如,已报告汽车排放的铂族元素和不同种类的有机邻苯二甲酸酯和酯类等物质在生物圈中积累。人类在室内和室外都会持续面临皮肤、呼吸和饮食接触这些颗粒的风险。事实上,灰尘颗粒物质已与欧洲每年近 50 万人的死亡和美国每年约 20 万人的死亡有关。迄今为止,对室内和室外灰尘暴露对正常菌群微生物的生理影响的研究有限。在这项研究中,评估了室内和室外灰尘暴露对三种机会性细菌(大肠杆菌、粪肠球菌和铜绿假单胞菌)的影响。具体而言,在室内和室外灰尘暴露后,测量了细菌的生长、氧化应激抗性和生物膜形成。研究在细菌通常遇到的营养丰富和营养贫乏的环境中进行。令人惊讶的是,室内灰尘(200μg/mL)在营养贫乏的条件下增强了所有三种细菌的生长,但在营养丰富的条件下减缓了生长。在营养丰富的培养基中,室内或室外灰尘暴露 100μg/mL 显著降低了大肠杆菌的氧化应激抗性。最有趣的是,灰尘(室内和室外),无论是在营养丰富还是贫瘠的条件下,都显著增加了所有三种细菌的生物膜形成。这些数据表明,室内和室外灰尘可以通过改变生长、对氧化应激的敏感性以及通过增强生物膜形成来增加其毒力潜力,从而改变机会性细菌。