Abstract

During commercial saturation diving, divers live and work under hyperbaric and hyperoxic conditions. The myriads of bacteria that live in and on the human body must adjust to the resultant hyperbaric stress. In this study, we examined the shifts in bacterial content in the oral cavity of saturation divers, using a metagenomic approach to determine the diversity in the composition of bacterial phyla and genera in saliva from 23 male divers before, during, and immediately after 4 weeks of commercial heliox saturation diving to a working depth of circa 200 m. We found that the bacterial diversity fell during saturation, and there was a change in bacterial composition; with a decrease at the phylum level of obligate anaerobe Fusobacteria, and an increase of the relative abundance of Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria. At the genus level, Fusobacterium, Leptotrichia, Oribacterium, and Veillonella decreased, whereas Neisseria and Rothia increased. However, at the end of the decompression, both the diversity and composition of the microbiota returned to pre-dive values. The results indicate that the hyperoxic conditions during saturation may suppress the activity of anaerobes, leaving a niche for other bacteria to fill. The transient nature of the change could imply that hyperbaric heliox saturation has no lasting effect on the oral microbiota, but it is unknown whether or how a shift in oral bacterial diversity and abundance during saturation might impact the divers’ health or well-being.

Highlights

  • Commercial saturation diving is used to perform long-term subsea work at greater depths

  • Ten different bacterial phyla were detected by taxonomic analysis of the 16S rRNA sequencing data from saliva collected from 23 divers before, during, and at the end of 4 weeks of commercial heliox saturation diving

  • Five phyla were dominant in all the samples: Firmicutes (34%), Proteobacteria (27%), Bacteroidetes (17%), Actinobacteria (11%), and Fusobacteria (9%)

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Summary

Introduction

Commercial saturation diving is used to perform long-term subsea work at greater depths. Since the first appearance of the term microbiota in 2001 (Lederberg and McCray, 2001) and the recent development of metagenomics study tools, a large number of studies have emerged emphasizing the dual role of microorganisms inhabiting the human body in health protection as well as the development of diseases (Scannapieco, 2013; Wade, 2013; Yamashita and Takeshita, 2017; Sharma et al, 2018; Zheng et al, 2020). They interact with the host’s immune system and affect central metabolic processes (Chu and Mazmanian, 2013; Belkaid and Hand, 2014)

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