Abstract

Culture-independent microbiome surveys have been conducted in homes, hospitals, schools, kindergartens and vehicles for public transport, revealing diverse microbial distributions in built environments. However, microbiome composition and the associated environmental characteristics have not been characterized in hotel environments. We presented here the first continental-scale microbiome study of hotel rooms (n = 68) spanning Asia and Europe. Bacterial and fungal communities were described by amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region and quantitative PCR. Similar numbers of bacterial (4,344) and fungal (4,555) operational taxonomic units were identified in the same sequencing depth, but most fungal taxa showed a restricted distribution compared to bacterial taxa. Aerobic, ubiquitous bacteria dominated the hotel microbiome with compositional similarity to previous samples from building and human nasopharynx environments. The abundance of Aspergillus was negatively correlated with latitude and accounted for ∼80% of the total fungal load in seven low-latitude hotels. We calculated the association between hotel microbiome and 16 indoor and outdoor environmental characteristics. Fungal composition and absolute quantity showed concordant associations with the same environmental characteristics, including latitude, quality of the interior, proximity to the sea, and visible mold, while fungal richness was negatively associated with heavy traffic (95% confidence interval [CI] = -127.05 to -0.25) and wall-to-wall carpet (95% CI = -47.60 to -3.82). Bacterial compositional variation was associated with latitude, quality of the interior, and floor type, while bacterial richness was negatively associated with recent redecoration (95% CI -179.00 to -44.55) and mechanical ventilation (95% CI = -136.71 to -5.12).IMPORTANCE This is the first microbiome study to characterize the microbiome data and associated environmental characteristics in hotel environments. In this study, we found concordant variation between fungal compositional variation and absolute quantity and discordant variation between community variation/quantity and richness. Our study can be used to promote hotel hygiene standards and provide resource information for future microbiome and exposure studies associated with health effects in hotel rooms.

Highlights

  • Culture-independent microbiome surveys have been conducted in homes, hospitals, schools, kindergartens and vehicles for public transport, revealing diverse microbial distributions in built environments

  • The sampling location was rarely cleaned by hotel staff and reflected the airborne microbiome composition accumulated over at least several months

  • One was used for quantitative analysis of fungi DNA, the results of which were published in a previous study [36], and the other sample was used for 16S rRNA gene and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region sequencing in the present study

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Summary

Introduction

Culture-independent microbiome surveys have been conducted in homes, hospitals, schools, kindergartens and vehicles for public transport, revealing diverse microbial distributions in built environments. Microbiome composition and the associated environmental characteristics have not been characterized in hotel environments. In a noncontaminated or moldy environment, indoor fungi are mainly sourced from outdoor air and structured by climate and geographical patterns [17, 20] Other indoor factors, such as mechanical ventilation, type of carpet, and cleaning procedure and frequency, shape indoor fungal communities [10]. Many hotels use standard cleaning procedures and ventilation systems for air exchange [32], and no pets are allowed in hotel rooms, so a major source of the indoor microbiome is controlled. Our previous study used quantitative PCR (qPCR) to monitor fungal quantity in hotels and identified several associated environmental characteristics [36]. Since no microbiome survey has been conducted in the hotel environment, the overall assemblage and diversity of hotel microbes and their environmental drivers are still unknown

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