Cao Liu, Yang Lu, Swanson Clifford S, Li Shuai, He Qiang
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA.
Institute for a Secure and Sustainable Environment, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA.
Front Environ Sci Eng. 2021;15(5):89. doi: 10.1007/s11783-020-1383-1. Epub 2020 Dec 10.
Educational facilities serve as community hubs and consequently hotspots for exposure to pathogenic microorganisms. Therefore, it is of critical importance to understand processes shaping the indoor microbiomes in educational facilities to protect public health by reducing potential exposure risks of students and the broader community. In this study, the indoor surface bacterial microbiomes were characterized in two multifunctional university buildings with contrasting levels of human occupancy, of which one was recently constructed with minimal human occupancy while the other had been in full operation for six years. Higher levels of human occupancy in the older building were shown to result in greater microbial abundance in the indoor environment and greater proportion of the indoor surface bacterial microbiomes contributed from human-associated microbiota, particularly the skin microbiota. It was further revealed that human-associated microbiota had greater influence on the indoor surface bacterial microbiomes in areas of high occupancy than areas of low occupancy. Consistent with minimal impact from human occupancy in a new construction, the indoor microbiomes in the new building exhibited significantly lower influence from human-associated microbiota than in the older building, with microbial taxa originating from soil and plants representing the dominant constituents of the indoor surface bacterial microbiomes. In contrast, microbial taxa in the older building with extensive human occupancy were represented by constituents of the human microbiota, likely from occupants. These findings provide insights into processes shaping the indoor microbiomes which will aid the development of effective strategies to control microbial exposure risks of occupants in educational facilities.
教育设施是社区中心,因此也是接触致病微生物的热点区域。因此,了解塑造教育设施室内微生物群落的过程对于通过降低学生和更广泛社区的潜在接触风险来保护公众健康至关重要。在本研究中,对两座多功能大学建筑的室内表面细菌微生物群落进行了表征,这两座建筑的人员占用水平不同,其中一座是新建的,人员占用极少,而另一座已全面运营六年。结果表明,旧建筑中较高的人员占用水平导致室内环境中微生物丰度更高,且室内表面细菌微生物群落中来自人类相关微生物群(尤其是皮肤微生物群)的比例更大。进一步研究发现,与低占用区域相比,人类相关微生物群对高占用区域的室内表面细菌微生物群落影响更大。与新建建筑中人员占用影响极小一致,新建建筑中的室内微生物群落受人类相关微生物群的影响明显低于旧建筑,来自土壤和植物的微生物分类群是室内表面细菌微生物群落的主要组成部分。相比之下,人员占用广泛的旧建筑中的微生物分类群以人类微生物群的成分(可能来自居住者)为代表。这些发现为塑造室内微生物群落的过程提供了见解,这将有助于制定有效的策略来控制教育设施中居住者的微生物接触风险。