Longitudinal analysis of microbial interaction between humans and the indoor environment
Argonne National Laboratory · University of Chicago · +7 more institutions
Abstract
The bacteria that colonize humans and our built environments have the potential to influence our health. Microbial communities associated with seven families and their homes over 6 weeks were assessed, including three families that moved their home. Microbial communities differed substantially among homes, and the home microbiome was largely sourced from humans. The microbiota in each home were identifiable by family. Network analysis identified humans as the primary bacterial vector, and a Bayesian method significantly matched individuals to their dwellings. Draft genomes of potential human pathogens observed on a kitchen counter could be matched to the hands of occupants. After a house move, the microbial…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
20- SLSimon LaxCorresponding
Argonne National Laboratory, University of Chicago
- DPDaniel P. SmithCorresponding
Argonne National Laboratory, Baylor College of Medicine, University of Chicago
- JHJarrad Hampton‐Marcell
Argonne National Laboratory, University of Chicago
- SMSarah M. Owens
Argonne National Laboratory, University of Chicago
- KMKim M. Handley
Argonne National Laboratory, University of Chicago
Topics & keywords
- Microbiome
- Colonization
- Biology
- Microbial population biology
- Ecology
- Environmental health
- Bacteria
- Medicine