Coil David A, Neches Russell Y, Lang Jenna M, Jospin Guillaume, Brown Wendy E, Cavalier Darlene, Hampton-Marcell Jarrad, Gilbert Jack A, Eisen Jonathan A
Genome Center, University of California, Davis, CA, United States of America.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of California, Irvine, CA, United States of America.
PeerJ. 2020 Jun 9;8:e9235. doi: 10.7717/peerj.9235. eCollection 2020.
Every human being carries with them a collection of microbes, a collection that is likely both unique to that person, but also dynamic as a result of significant flux with the surrounding environment. The interaction of the human microbiome (i.e., the microbes that are found directly in contact with a person in places such as the gut, mouth, and skin) and the microbiome of accessory objects (e.g., shoes, clothing, phones, jewelry) is of potential interest to both epidemiology and the developing field of microbial forensics. Therefore, the microbiome of personal accessories are of interest because they serve as both a microbial source and sink for an individual, they may provide information about the microbial exposure experienced by an individual, and they can be sampled non-invasively.
We report here a large-scale study of the microbiome found on cell phones and shoes. Cell phones serve as a potential source and sink for skin and oral microbiome, while shoes can act as sampling devices for microbial environmental experience. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, we characterized the microbiome of thousands of paired sets of cell phones and shoes from individuals at sporting events, museums, and other venues around the United States.
We place this data in the context of previous studies and demonstrate that the microbiome of phones and shoes are different. This difference is driven largely by the presence of "environmental" taxa (taxa from groups that tend to be found in places like soil) on shoes and human-associated taxa (taxa from groups that are abundant in the human microbiome) on phones. This large dataset also contains many novel taxa, highlighting the fact that much of microbial diversity remains uncharacterized, even on commonplace objects.
每个人身上都携带着一群微生物,这群微生物可能因人而异,而且由于与周围环境的大量交互而处于动态变化中。人类微生物组(即直接存在于人体肠道、口腔和皮肤等部位的微生物)与附属物品(如鞋子、衣物、手机、珠宝)的微生物组之间的相互作用,在流行病学和新兴的微生物法医学领域都具有潜在研究价值。因此,个人物品的微生物组备受关注,因为它们既是个体的微生物来源,也是微生物汇聚地,可能提供有关个体所经历的微生物暴露的信息,并且可以通过非侵入性方式进行采样。
我们在此报告一项关于手机和鞋子上微生物组的大规模研究。手机可作为皮肤和口腔微生物组的潜在来源和汇聚地,而鞋子可作为微生物环境体验的采样装置。我们利用16S rRNA基因测序技术,对来自美国各地体育赛事、博物馆及其他场所的数千对个人的手机和鞋子上的微生物组进行了特征分析。
我们将这些数据置于先前研究的背景下,证明手机和鞋子的微生物组存在差异。这种差异主要是由鞋子上存在“环境”分类群(倾向于在土壤等地方发现的分类群)以及手机上存在与人类相关的分类群(在人类微生物组中丰富的分类群)所驱动的。这个庞大的数据集还包含许多新的分类群,凸显出即使在常见物品上,许多微生物多样性仍未得到表征这一事实。