Concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the Chicago area

Abstract The particulate and biological components of indoor air have a substantial impact on human health, especially immune respiratory conditions such as asthma. To better explore the relationship between allergens, the microbial community, and the indoor living environment, we sampled the bedroo...

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Main Authors: Miles Richardson, Neil Gottel, Jack A. Gilbert, Julian Gordon, Prasanthi Gandhi, Rachel Reboulet, Jarrad T. Hampton-Marcell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:Microbiome
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40168-019-0695-5
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spelling doaj-e0f8dfa2848042b3b0a67fd5e8457d942020-11-25T03:53:50ZengBMCMicrobiome2049-26182019-06-017111010.1186/s40168-019-0695-5Concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the Chicago areaMiles Richardson0Neil Gottel1Jack A. Gilbert2Julian Gordon3Prasanthi Gandhi4Rachel Reboulet5Jarrad T. Hampton-Marcell6Department of Systems Biology, Columbia UniversityThe Microbiome Center, Department of Surgery, University of ChicagoThe Microbiome Center, Department of Surgery, University of ChicagoInspirotec IncInspirotec IncInspirotec IncThe Microbiome Center, Department of Surgery, University of ChicagoAbstract The particulate and biological components of indoor air have a substantial impact on human health, especially immune respiratory conditions such as asthma. To better explore the relationship between allergens, the microbial community, and the indoor living environment, we sampled the bedrooms of 65 homes in the Chicago area using 23the patient-friendly Inspirotec electrokinetic air sampling device, which collects airborne particles for characterization of both allergens and microbial DNA. The sampling device captured sufficient microbial material to enable 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing data to be generated for every sample in the study. Neither the presence of HEPA filters nor the height at which the air sampling device was placed had any influence on the microbial community profile. A core microbiota of 31 OTUs was present in more than three quarters of the samples, comprising around 45% of the relative sequence counts in each bedroom. The most abundant single organisms were Staphylococcus, with other core taxa both human and outdoor-associated. Bacterial alpha diversity was significantly increased in bedrooms that reported having open windows, those with flowering plants in the vicinity, and those in homes occupied by dogs. Porphyromonas, Moraxella, Sutterella, and Clostridium, along with family Neisseraceae, were significantly enriched in homes with dogs; interestingly, cats did not show a significant impact on microbial diversity or relative abundance. While dog allergen load was significantly correlated with bacterial alpha diversity, the taxa that significantly correlated with allergen burden did not exclusively overlap with those enriched in homes with dogs. Alternaria allergen load was positively correlated with bacterial alpha diversity, while Aspergillus allergen load was negatively correlated. The Alternaria allergen load was also significantly correlated with open windows. Microbial communities were significantly differentiated between rural, suburban, and urban homes and houses that were physically closer to each other maintained significantly more similar microbiota. We have demonstrated that it is possible to determine significant associations between allergen burden and the microbiota in air from the same sample and that these associations relate to the characteristics of the home and neighborhoods.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40168-019-0695-5
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miles Richardson
Neil Gottel
Jack A. Gilbert
Julian Gordon
Prasanthi Gandhi
Rachel Reboulet
Jarrad T. Hampton-Marcell
spellingShingle Miles Richardson
Neil Gottel
Jack A. Gilbert
Julian Gordon
Prasanthi Gandhi
Rachel Reboulet
Jarrad T. Hampton-Marcell
Concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the Chicago area
Microbiome
author_facet Miles Richardson
Neil Gottel
Jack A. Gilbert
Julian Gordon
Prasanthi Gandhi
Rachel Reboulet
Jarrad T. Hampton-Marcell
author_sort Miles Richardson
title Concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the Chicago area
title_short Concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the Chicago area
title_full Concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the Chicago area
title_fullStr Concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the Chicago area
title_full_unstemmed Concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the Chicago area
title_sort concurrent measurement of microbiome and allergens in the air of bedrooms of allergy disease patients in the chicago area
publisher BMC
series Microbiome
issn 2049-2618
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract The particulate and biological components of indoor air have a substantial impact on human health, especially immune respiratory conditions such as asthma. To better explore the relationship between allergens, the microbial community, and the indoor living environment, we sampled the bedrooms of 65 homes in the Chicago area using 23the patient-friendly Inspirotec electrokinetic air sampling device, which collects airborne particles for characterization of both allergens and microbial DNA. The sampling device captured sufficient microbial material to enable 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing data to be generated for every sample in the study. Neither the presence of HEPA filters nor the height at which the air sampling device was placed had any influence on the microbial community profile. A core microbiota of 31 OTUs was present in more than three quarters of the samples, comprising around 45% of the relative sequence counts in each bedroom. The most abundant single organisms were Staphylococcus, with other core taxa both human and outdoor-associated. Bacterial alpha diversity was significantly increased in bedrooms that reported having open windows, those with flowering plants in the vicinity, and those in homes occupied by dogs. Porphyromonas, Moraxella, Sutterella, and Clostridium, along with family Neisseraceae, were significantly enriched in homes with dogs; interestingly, cats did not show a significant impact on microbial diversity or relative abundance. While dog allergen load was significantly correlated with bacterial alpha diversity, the taxa that significantly correlated with allergen burden did not exclusively overlap with those enriched in homes with dogs. Alternaria allergen load was positively correlated with bacterial alpha diversity, while Aspergillus allergen load was negatively correlated. The Alternaria allergen load was also significantly correlated with open windows. Microbial communities were significantly differentiated between rural, suburban, and urban homes and houses that were physically closer to each other maintained significantly more similar microbiota. We have demonstrated that it is possible to determine significant associations between allergen burden and the microbiota in air from the same sample and that these associations relate to the characteristics of the home and neighborhoods.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40168-019-0695-5
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