Abstract

BackgroundWe spend most of our lives in indoor environments and are exposed to microbes present in these environments. Hence, knowledge about this exposure is important for understanding how it impacts on human health. However, the bacterial flora in indoor environments has been only fragmentarily explored and mostly using culture methods. The application of molecular methods previously utilised in other environments has resulted in a substantial increase in our awareness of microbial diversity.ResultsThe composition and dynamics of indoor dust bacterial flora were investigated in two buildings over a period of one year. Four samples were taken in each building, corresponding to the four seasons, and 16S rDNA libraries were constructed. A total of 893 clones were analysed and 283 distinct operational taxonomic units (OTUs) detected among them using 97% sequence similarity as the criterion. All libraries were dominated by Gram-positive sequences, with the most abundant phylum being Firmicutes. Four OTUs having high similarity to Corynebacterium-, Propionibacterium-, Streptococcus- and Staphylococcus- sequences were present in all samples. The most abundant of the Gram-negative OTUs were members of the family Sphingomonadaceae, followed by Oxalobacteraceae, Comamonadaceae, Neisseriaceae and Rhizobiaceae.The relative abundance of alpha- and betaproteobacteria increased slightly towards summer at the expense of firmicutes. The proportion of firmicutes and gammaproteobacteria of the total diversity was highest in winter and that of actinobacteria, alpha- and betaproteobacteria in spring or summer, whereas the diversity of bacteroidetes peaked in fall. A statistical comparison of the libraries revealed that the bacterial flora of the two buildings differed during all seasons except spring, but differences between seasons within one building were not that clear, indicating that differences between the buildings were greater than the differences between seasons.ConclusionThis work demonstrated that the bacterial flora of indoor dust is complex and dominated by Gram-positive species. The dominant phylotypes most probably originated from users of the building. Seasonal variation was observed as proportional changes of the phyla and at the species level. The microflora of the two buildings investigated differed statistically and differences between the buildings were more pronounced than differences between seasons.

Highlights

  • We spend most of our lives in indoor environments and are exposed to microbes present in these environments

  • The composition and dynamics of indoor dust bacterial flora were investigated in two buildings over a period of one year

  • This work demonstrated that the bacterial flora of indoor dust is complex and dominated by Gram-positive species

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Summary

Introduction

We spend most of our lives in indoor environments and are exposed to microbes present in these environments Knowledge about this exposure is important for understanding how it impacts on human health. Infectious agents normally cannot persist for a long time in air, a recent study has shown that antibiotic-resistant Staphylococcus aureus is common in indoor air of normal residential buildings [6]. Against this background, it is surprising how little we know about the composition of the microbial communities in indoor environments. The information is fragmentary and mostly based on cultivation methods, it has been claimed that only approximately 1% of the microbes in indoor environments are viable [7]

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