| Literature DB >> 32321582 |
Collin M Timm1, Kristin Loomis1, William Stone1, Thomas Mehoke1, Bryan Brensinger1, Matthew Pellicore1, Phillip P A Staniczenko2, Curtisha Charles3, Seema Nayak3, David K Karig4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The skin micro-environment varies across the body, but all sites are host to microorganisms that can impact skin health. Some of these organisms are true commensals which colonize a unique niche on the skin, while open exposure of the skin to the environment also results in the transient presence of diverse microbes with unknown influences on skin health. Culture-based studies of skin microbiota suggest that skin microbes can affect skin properties, immune responses, pathogen growth, and wound healing.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon source utilization; Isolate collection; Skin microbiome
Year: 2020 PMID: 32321582 PMCID: PMC7178971 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-020-00831-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1Summary of isolation sites and conditions. a Research participants metadata includes age, gender, trans-epidermal water loss, and sebum content. b Example blood agar plate showing colony morphologies. c Total number of isolates by site. d Isolate counts from growth conditions, not including the standard condition of room temperature (RT), blood agar. e Total number of isolates by research participant. Black bars signify research participants for which multiple isolation conditions were performed. See Table S1 for additional metadata
Fig. 2Phylogenetic tree of bacterial isolates. 16S tree for bacterial isolates. Sequences with 99% similarity are collapsed into a single node. Concentric columns indicate number of 99% similar 16S sequences by color-coded site. Pop-out tables indicate number of isolates by research participants/site that map to common S. epidermidis strains
Fig. 3Bacterial diversity between subjects/sites. Correlation between number of genera by site (raw data shown in a for b antecubital fossa (AF) vs. forearm (AM), c antecubital fossa (AF) vs forehead (FM), and d forearm (AM) vs. forehead (FM). p values were calculated from Pearson correlation with 17 pairs. Outlined bars and points indicate subjects with multiple isolation conditions
Fig. 4Fungal isolates. a ITS tree. Blue branches are Ascomycota and orange branches are Basidiomycota. b Isolate FM062_001 identified as Cladosporium caldospoiroides. c Isolate AF056_018 identified as Penicillium dipodomyicola. d Isolate AF064_005 identified as Epicoccum nigrum. e Isolate AF069_007 identified as Naganishia liquefaciens. f Isolate AM063_501 identified as Naganishia liquefaciens. g Isolate AF054_013 identified as Rhodotorula mucilaginosa
Fig. 5Skin resource utilization by skin microbiota isolates. a Resource utilization screen. Blue cells indicate a significant color change by the reduction-reporting dye; white cells indicate no significant color change not observed. b Scatterplot of the number of resources found to be utilized by each organism. c Carbon source utilization for generalists across skin isolates is positively related to phylogenetic similarity (four or more carbon sources R = 0.169; p = 0.003)
Culture conditions for isolating organisms
| Target | Media | Temperature | Special conditions | Leading number in isolate ID 1 | Research participant(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aerobes | Blood agar (Hardy Diagnostics) | Room temp. | Aerobic | 0 | All |
| Aerobes | Blood agar (Hardy Diagnostics) | 37 °C | Aerobic | 1 | 60, 63, 66, 70 |
| Anaerobes | Blood agar (Hardy Diagnostics) | 37 °C | Anaerobic3 | 2 | 60, 63, 66, 70 |
| Slow growers | R2A (BD Biosciences) | Room temp. | Aerobic | 4 | 63, 66, 70 |
| Lactobacilli | MRS (Difco) | Room temp. | Aerobic | 6 | 63, 66, 70 |
| Fungi | PDA (BD Biosciences) | Room temp. | Aerobic | 5 | 63, 66, 70 |
| Spores | Blood agar (Hardy Diagnostics) | Room temp. | 4 h incubation in 70% EtOH, aerobic | 7 | 63, 66, 70 |
| Anaerobic spores | Blood agar (Hardy Diagnostics) | 37 °C | 4 h incubation in 70% EtOH, anaerobic3 | 8 | 66, 70 |
| Capnophiles | Blood agar (Hardy Diagnostics) | 37 °C | Aerobic + 5% CO2 | 3 | 60 |
| Gram-negative | MacConkey | Room temp. | Aerobic, dark | 6 | 70 |
| Halophiles | Medium for halophilic bacteria2 | Room temp. | 10% NaCl, aerobic | 3 | 70 |
| Anaerobic halophiles | Medium for halophilic bacteria2 | 37 °C | 10% NaCl, anaerobic3 | 9 | 70 |
| Deep skin aerobes | Blood agar (Hardy Diagnostics) | 37 °C | Tape strips #5 and #10, aerobic | TS5, TS10 | 70 |
| Deep skin anaerobes | Blood agar (Hardy Diagnostics) | 37 °C | Tape strips #5 and #10, anaerobic3 | TS5a, TS10a | 70 |
1For example, FM060_X01 represents the first isolate from the forehead site (FM) from research participants # 60, where X is the leading number
2DSMZ 73 media, 10 g/L casamino acids (Sigma), 10 g/L yeast extract (Sigma), 100 g/L NaCl, pH7.0 [37]
3Anaerobic conditions were obtained using the BD GasPak EZ system (Fisher Scientific)