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宿舍环境中学生微生物相似性揭示了个体微生物特征的法医学潜力。

Microbial Similarity between Students in a Common Dormitory Environment Reveals the Forensic Potential of Individual Microbial Signatures.

机构信息

Department of Systems Biology, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA

Integrated Program in Cellular, Molecular, and Biomedical Studies, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA.

出版信息

mBio. 2019 Jul 30;10(4):e01054-19. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01054-19.

Abstract

The microbiota of the built environment is an amalgamation of both human and environmental sources. While human sources have been examined within single-family households or in public environments, it is unclear what effect a large number of cohabitating people have on the microbial communities of their shared environment. We sampled the public and private spaces of a college dormitory, disentangling individual microbial signatures and their impact on the microbiota of common spaces. We compared multiple methods for marker gene sequence clustering and found that minimum entropy decomposition (MED) was best able to distinguish between the microbial signatures of different individuals and was able to uncover more discriminative taxa across all taxonomic groups. Further, weighted UniFrac- and random forest-based graph analyses uncovered two distinct spheres of hand- or shoe-associated samples. Using graph-based clustering, we identified spheres of interaction and found that connection between these clusters was enriched for hands, implicating them as a primary means of transmission. In contrast, shoe-associated samples were found to be freely interacting, with individual shoes more connected to each other than to the floors they interact with. Individual interactions were highly dynamic, with groups of samples originating from individuals clustering freely with samples from other individuals, while all floor and shoe samples consistently clustered together. Humans leave behind a microbial trail, regardless of intention. This may allow for the identification of individuals based on the "microbial signatures" they shed in built environments. In a shared living environment, these trails intersect, and through interaction with common surfaces may become homogenized, potentially confounding our ability to link individuals to their associated microbiota. We sought to understand the factors that influence the mixing of individual signatures and how best to process sequencing data to best tease apart these signatures.

摘要

建筑环境中的微生物群是人类和环境来源的混合体。虽然已经在单个家庭或公共环境中研究了人类来源,但不清楚大量共同居住的人对其共享环境中的微生物群落有什么影响。我们从大学宿舍的公共和私人空间中采样,分离出个体微生物特征及其对公共空间中微生物群落的影响。我们比较了多种标记基因序列聚类方法,发现最小熵分解(MED)最能区分不同个体的微生物特征,并能够在所有分类群中发现更多有区别的分类群。此外,加权 UniFrac 和基于随机森林的图分析揭示了手或鞋相关样本的两个不同球体。使用基于图的聚类,我们确定了相互作用的球体,并发现这些聚类之间的连接富含手,暗示它们是主要的传播途径。相比之下,鞋相关的样本被发现是自由相互作用的,个体鞋之间的连接比它们与所接触的地板之间的连接更紧密。个体相互作用高度动态,来自个体的样本组与其他个体的样本自由聚类,而所有地板和鞋样本始终聚类在一起。人类会留下微生物痕迹,无论其意图如何。这可能允许根据他们在建筑环境中释放的“微生物特征”来识别个体。在共享的生活环境中,这些痕迹会相交,并通过与公共表面的相互作用而变得均匀化,这可能会干扰我们将个体与其相关微生物群落联系起来的能力。我们试图了解影响个体特征混合的因素,以及如何最好地处理测序数据以最好地分离这些特征。

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