| Literature DB >> 29876609 |
Howard Weiss1, Vicki Stover Hertzberg2, Chris Dupont3, Josh L Espinoza3, Shawn Levy4, Karen Nelson5, Sharon Norris6.
Abstract
Serving over three billion passengers annually, air travel serves as a conduit for infectious disease spread, including emerging infections and pandemics. Over two dozen cases of in-flight transmissions have been documented. To understand these risks, a characterization of the airplane cabin microbiome is necessary. Our study team collected 229 environmental samples on ten transcontinental US flights with subsequent 16S rRNA sequencing. We found that bacterial communities were largely derived from human skin and oral commensals, as well as environmental generalist bacteria. We identified clear signatures for air versus touch surface microbiome, but not for individual types of touch surfaces. We also found large flight-to-flight beta diversity variations with no distinguishing signatures of individual flights, rather a high between-flight diversity for all touch surfaces and particularly for air samples. There was no systematic pattern of microbial community change from pre- to post-flight. Our findings are similar to those of other recent studies of the microbiome of built environments. In summary, the airplane cabin microbiome has immense airplane to airplane variability. The vast majority of airplane-associated microbes are human commensals or non-pathogenic, and the results provide a baseline for non-crisis-level airplane microbiome conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteria; Commercial airplanes; Microbiome; Pandemic; Respiratory infection
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29876609 PMCID: PMC6318343 DOI: 10.1007/s00248-018-1191-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Ecol ISSN: 0095-3628 Impact factor: 4.552
Fig. 1Most prevalent families in air (left) and touch surface samples (right) by relative abundance (proportion of families)
Fig. 2Scatterplot of the logs of the first two principal components, colored by sample source. a Families. b OTUs
Fig. 3Results of iDMM analysis indicating two distinct ecostates. a Composition of the four ecostates identified in the iDMM analysis. b Most prevalent OTUs identified in the two ecostates associated with cabin air
Fig. 4Logged average number of reads for OTUs from pre- to post-flight for each touch surface (fomite) type
Fig. 5Beta diversity of samples. Scatterplot of the first two principal components of the beta diversity analysis, for a OTU-level and b family-level abundance, based on a Bray-Curtis distance. c Distributions of Bray-Curtis distances for different touch surface types, within and between flights