Abstract

Occupational exposure to grain dust is associated with both acute and chronic effects on the airways. However, the aetiology of these effects is not completely understood, mainly due to the complexity and variety of potentially causative agents to which workers are exposed during cereals process. In this study, we characterized the mycobiome during different steps of wheat processing—harvesting, grain unloading and straw handling—and compared it to mycobiomes of domestic environments—rural and urban. To do so, settled dust was collected at a six month interval for six weeks in the close proximity of 142 participants, 74 occupationally exposed to wheat dust—freshly harvested or stored—and 68 not occupationally exposed to it. Fungal community composition was determined in those samples by high-throughput sequencing of the primary fungal barcode marker internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1). The comparison of different mycobiomes revealed that fungal richness, as well as their composition, was much higher in the domestic environment than at the workplace. Furthermore, we found that the fungal community composition strongly differed between workplaces where workers handled freshly harvested wheat and those where they handled stored wheat. Indicator species for each exposed population were identified. Our results emphasize the complexity of exposure of grain workers and farmers and open new perspectives in the identification of the etiological factors responsible for the respiratory pathologies induced by wheat dust exposure.

Highlights

  • Occupational exposure to wheat dust has been shown to be associated with both acute and chronic effects on the airways of operators handling grain or straw [1,2]

  • This study showed the extreme difference between domestic and occupational exposure to fungi of study showed and the extreme between domestic and occupational exposure to fungi cattleThis raisers, harvesters terminaldifference elevator operators (TEOs)

  • We showed that the fungal communities found in the wheat dust to which these populations were exposed, differed

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Summary

Introduction

Occupational exposure to wheat dust has been shown to be associated with both acute and chronic effects on the airways of operators handling grain or straw [1,2]. Wheat is the most intensively cultured cereal in western countries, and working populations handling wheat grain or straw are one such group that typically gets exposed to a single crop during a given period of time. Harvest workers are specialized in grain or straw harvesting. Cattle raisers, by intensifying their activity, see an increase in their exposure to wheat straw as livestock litter. All of these populations are exposed to

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