PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers produce first atlas of airborne microbes across United States

CU-Boulder, North Carolina State University team up on novel study

2015-04-20
(Press-News.org) A University of Colorado Boulder and North Carolina State University-led team has produced the first atlas of airborne microbes across the continental U.S., a feat that has implications for better understanding health and disease in humans, animals and crops.

The researchers collected outdoor dust samples from roughly 1,200 homes in all 50 states from both urban and rural areas using a powerful DNA sequencing technique to identify specific bacteria and fungal species. While standard, culture-based surveys are able to detect only a handful of different species, the high-tech molecular technique revealed that an average dust sample from the study contained roughly 4,700 different bacterial species and about 1,400 fungal species.

The total number of bacterial species identified in the study was more than 110,000, along with more than 55,000 fungal species, many unknown to science. But not all bacteria and fungi are harmful - many have health benefits, researchers now know.

"We inhale thousands of airborne microbes every hour we spend outdoors, some of which can cause illnesses or trigger allergic disorders," said lead study author and CU-Boulder Associate Professor Noah Fierer of the ecology and evolutionary biology department. "This study provides the first glimpse of the continental-scale distributions of microorganisms in the atmosphere, giving us the baseline data to ask all sorts of interesting questions."

It might now be possible to correlate specific areas in cities or states where people are especially sensitive to fungal allergies or asthma, for example, with areas that have particular fungal types regularly swirling in the outdoor air, said Fierer.

A paper on the subject was published in the April 20 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Co-authors include CU-Boulder's Albert Barberan and Jonathan Leff, NCSU's Rob Dunn and Holly Menninger and the University of California, San Francisco's Katherine Pollard and Joshua Ladau.

Several patterns emerged during the study, said Fierer, also a fellow at the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES). The team found a "bicoastal" pattern showing that microbial communities from homes on the East Coast and West Coast were more similar to each other than those from homes in the nation's interior.

Airborne microbes are capable of being transported phenomenal distances - aerosols in Saharan dust clouds from Africa, for instance, have been shown to impact the ecology of lakes in Spain and coral reefs in the Caribbean Sea. While the microbial communities in the study were highly variable in composition across America, their geographic patterns are associated in large part with variability in climate and soils, Fierer said.

Volunteers collected the samples as part of Wild Life in Our Homes project, a national citizen-scientist effort coordinated by NCSU. Participants from all 50 states used kits mailed to them to swab the dust from the upper door trim on the outside surface of an exterior door for bacteria and fungal samples. Door trim is an ideal site: It's found on virtually every home and collects outdoor aerosols with little or no direct contact by home occupants.

While there is the perception that those living in the country breathe in far different types of bacteria and fungi than those living in cities, that does not seem to be the case, said the study authors. Even though urban and rural samples of dust were not distinct from each other, the study does suggest urbanization leads to at least some degree of homogenization of airborne microbe types.

"If I go from a rural area near Raleigh, North Carolina, to downtown Raleigh, I don't see a big difference in airborne microbial life between the two places," said Dunn, a biological sciences associate professor at NCSU. "But if I go from Raleigh to New York City, the microbial life is even more similar. So there are subtle differences here."

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation's Microbiology of the Built Environment program and the National Science Foundation funded the study.

Fierer likened the new United States microbial map to botanical maps of the country assembled by U.S. scientists more than 150 years ago.

"Going into this study, we didn't even know answers to basic questions like whether the airborne bacteria and fungi in Denver were different from those in San Francisco," said CU-Boulder co-author Albert Barberan, a CIRES postdoctoral researcher. "But we saw certain patterns, and now we have the methods and tools to answer new questions."

The PNAS paper is a companion study to one published last week in the journal PLOS ONE by the NCSU and CU-Boulder researchers showing fungal DNA can be used to track the origin of dust samples, making it a potential forensic tool for use by law enforcement officials or archaeologists. Given a swab of dust from anywhere in the country, the team can identify its geographic origin, sometimes within 60 miles or less.

In 2010, Fierer led another CU-Boulder study that showed unique bacterial signatures from a person's hand left behind on objects like computer keyboards and computer mice might also be effective as a forensics tool to confirm DNA and fingerprint analyses.

"Working with the public in our research is one of our lab's guiding principles," said Dunn. "One of the biggest challenges moving forward to manage our planet sensibly is to engage the public to help us study and understand the life around us.

"While there historically has been a glass wall through which citizens watched scientists at work, we want to take down the glass and have scientists and citizens communicate back and forth, altering the way each group thinks about the world," Dunn said.

The research involved isolating and amplifying tiny bits of microbial DNA, then sequencing that DNA to identify the different bacteria and fungal species found in each dust sample.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Uranium isotopes carry the fingerprint of ancient bacterial activity

2015-04-20
The oceans and other water bodies contain billions of tons of dissolved uranium. Over the planet's history, some of this uranium was transformed into an insoluble form, causing it to precipitate and accumulate in sediments. There are two ways that uranium can go from a soluble to an insoluble form: either through the action of live organisms - bacteria - or by interacting chemically with certain minerals. Knowing which pathway was taken can provide valuable insight into the evolution and activity of microbial biology over Earth's history. Publishing in the journal PNAS, ...

Study shows early environment has a lasting impact on stress response systems

2015-04-20
New University of Washington research finds that children's early environments have a lasting impact on their responses to stress later in life, and that the negative effects of deprived early environments can be mitigated -- but only if that happens before age 2. Published April 20 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the research is believed to be the first to identify a sensitive period during early life when children's stress response systems are particularly likely to be influenced by their caregiving environments. "The early environment has ...

Study: Soil nutrients may limit ability of plants to slow climate change

2015-04-20
MISSOULA - Many scientists assume that the growing level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will accelerate plant growth. However, a new study co-written by University of Montana researchers suggests much of this growth will be curtailed by limited soil nutrients. The end result: By the end of the century, there may be more than an additional 10 percent of CO2 in the atmosphere, which would accelerate climate change. "If society stays on its current trajectory of CO2 emissions and the growth rates of plants don't increase as much as many models project, the result by ...

Study re-examines sports restrictions for children with heart rhythm disorder

2015-04-20
Sports participation may be safer than previously thought for children with the heart rhythm disorder long QT syndrome, and authors of a new study in JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology say restrictions should be eased to allow appropriately treated children with the condition to participate more in recreational and competitive sports. "Re-examining participation rules is important because the physiologic benefits of exercise at all ages have been emphasized repeatedly and promoted as a national public health agenda," said Peter Aziz, M.D., lead author of the study and ...

Study compares outcomes of 2 devices used in carotid artery stenting

2015-04-20
WASHINGTON (April 20, 2015) - A study published today in JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions showed that in-hospital and 30-day stroke or death rates were equally low when using either a distal filter EPD (F-EPD) or a proximal EPD (P-EPD) to protect patients from blood clots during carotid artery stenting, but a small sample size for one device raises questions on the study's ability to detect potentially meaningful differences in outcomes. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services mandates that cardiologists use one of these two devices in order to be reimbursed ...

Two different carotid artery stenting procedures show little difference in effectiveness

2015-04-20
PHILADELPHIA - Use of either proximal embolic protection devices (P-EPDs) or distal filter embolic protection devices (F-EPDs) during elective carotid artery stenting results in low rates of in-hospital stroke and death, according to a new study from researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. The study, published in JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions, found that although P-EPDs have been theorized to be more effective than F-EPDs at preventing stroke during carotid artery stenting, this first comparative effectiveness study revealed ...

Extending natalizumab up to 8 weeks shown safe and effective in patients with MS

2015-04-20
In a study of 1,964 patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) led by researchers at the NYU Langone Multiple Sclerosis Comprehensive Care Center, extending the dose of natalizumab from 4 weeks up to 8 weeks was shown to be well-tolerated and effective in patients, and resulted in no cases of the potentially fatal side effect progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). The drug showed similar efficacy in treating disease activity among patients, according to the study led by Lana Zhovtis-Ryerson, MD, an assistant professor of neurology at the NYU Langone Multiple Sclerosis ...

Research highlights the importance of 'self-DNA' for maintaining diversity among species

2015-04-20
In natural plant communities, diversity is maintained by limits set on each plant by itself. This involves a detrimental effect of self-DNA (DNA from the same species released during decomposition) on the plant's and its offspring's growth. New research finds that this process not only regulates plant populations but may also be generalized to a range of additional organisms including algae, protozoa, fungi, and animals. The findings indicate that self-DNA is involved in the regulation of species coexistence and competition, and it might be harnessed for new pharmacological ...

Smoking may affect some women's likelihood of giving birth to twins

2015-04-20
A new study provides a possible explanation of reports that mothers of twins are more likely to have smoked, despite evidence that nicotine reduces fertility. Nicotine has an effect on hormone production, and while smoking may have deleterious effects on fertility, the study found that it may raise the likelihood of producing twins in women with certain genetic backgrounds. The researchers discovered significant interactions between smoking and variants in several genes, especially one in the TP53 gene. "Although we demonstrated that there are significant differences ...

What's the life expectancy of patients when they begin treatment for osteoporosis?

2015-04-20
Despite reports that people with osteoporosis have an increased risk of dying prematurely, a new study has found that life expectancy of newly diagnosed and treated osteoporosis patients is in excess of 15 years in women below the age of 75 and in men below the age of 60. In more detailed analyses, the residual life expectancy after beginning osteoporosis treatment was estimated to be 18.2 years in a 50-year-old man and 7.5 years in a 75-year old man. Estimates in women were 26.4 years and 13.5 years. The Journal of Bone and Mineral Research study included 58,637 patients ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

The Lundquist Institute receives $2.6 million grant from U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity to develop wearable biosensors

Understanding the cellular mechanisms of obesity-induced inflammation and metabolic dysfunction

Study highlights increased risk of second cancers among breast cancer survivors

International DNA Day launch for Hong Kong’s Moonshot for Biology

New scientific resources map food components to improve human and environmental health

Mass General Brigham research identifies pitfalls and opportunities for generative artificial intelligence in patient messaging systems

Opioids during pregnancy not linked to substantially increased risk of psychiatric disorders in children

Universities and schools urged to ban alcohol industry-backed health advice

From Uber ratings to credit scores: What’s lost in a society that counts and sorts everything?

Political ‘color’ affects pollution control spending in the US

Managing meandering waterways in a changing world

Expert sounds alarm as mosquito-borne diseases becoming a global phenomenon in a warmer more populated world

Climate change is multiplying the threat caused by antimicrobial resistance

UK/German study - COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness and fewer common side-effects most important factors in whether adults choose to get vaccinated

New ultraviolet light air disinfection technology could help protect against healthcare infections and even the next pandemic

Major genetic meta-analysis reveals how antibiotic resistance in babies varies according to mode of birth, prematurity, and where they live

Q&A: How TikTok’s ‘black box’ algorithm and design shape user behavior

American Academy of Arts and Sciences elects three NYU faculty as 2024 fellows

A closed-loop drug-delivery system could improve chemotherapy

MIT scientists tune the entanglement structure in an array of qubits

Geologists discover rocks with the oldest evidence yet of Earth’s magnetic field

It’s easier now to treat opioid addiction with medication -- but use has changed little

Researchers publish final results of key clinical trial for gene therapy for sickle cell disease

Identifying proteins causally related to COVID-19, healthspan and lifespan

New study reveals how AI can enhance flexibility, efficiency for customer service centers

UT School of Natural Resources team receives grant to remove ‘forever chemicals’ from water

Sweet potato quality analysis is enhanced with hyperspectral imaging and AI

Use of acid reflux drugs linked to higher risk of migraine

For immigrants to Canada, risk of MS increases with proportion of life spent there

Targeted use of enfortumab vedotin for the treatment of advanced urothelial carcinoma

[Press-News.org] Researchers produce first atlas of airborne microbes across United States
CU-Boulder, North Carolina State University team up on novel study