Location and indoor microbiome contamination are strongly linked, ¿are these factors taken into account by the food industry?
Buildings
are complex ecosystems that house trillions of microorganisms interacting with
each other, with humans and with their environment. Understanding the
ecological and evolutionary processes that determine the diversity and
composition of the built environment microbiome—the community of microorganisms
that live indoors—is important for understanding the relationship between
building design, biodiversity and human health.
In this
study, we used high-throughput sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene to quantify
relationships between building attributes and airborne bacterial communities at
a health-care facility. Airborne bacterial community structure were quantified and
environmental conditions in patient rooms exposed to mechanical or window ventilation
and in outdoor air.
The
phylogenetic diversity of airborne bacterial communities was lower indoors than
outdoors, and mechanically ventilated rooms contained less diverse microbial communities
than did window-ventilated rooms. Bacterial communities in indoor environments contained
many taxa that are absent or rare outdoors, including taxa closely related to
potential human pathogens.
Building attributes, specifically the source
of ventilation air, airflow rates, relative humidity and temperature, were
correlated with the diversity and composition of indoor bacterial communities.
The relative abundance of bacteria closely related to human pathogens was
higher indoors than outdoors, and higher in rooms with lower airflow rates and
lower relative humidity.
The
observed relationship between building design and airborne bacterial diversity
suggests that we can manage indoor environments, altering through building
design and operation the community of microbial species that potentially
colonize the human microbiome during our time indoors.
The information generated by this study is very important for food producers and processors, especially for those engaged with massive products such as meats and highly processed fooods.
Source: The
ISME Journal (2012) 6, 1469–1479; doi:10.1038/ismej.2011.211; published online
26 January 2012
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