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Haze Exposure Changes the Skin Fungal Community and Promotes the Growth of Talaromyces Strains

Haze pollution has been a public health issue. The skin microbiota, as a component of the first line of defense, is disturbed by environmental pollutants, which may have an impact on human health. A total of 74 skin samples from healthy students were collected during haze and nonhaze days in spring...

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Autores principales: Yan, Dong, Li, Min, Si, Wenhao, Ni, Shijun, Liu, Xin, Chang, Yahan, Guo, Xiaochan, Wang, Jingjing, Bai, Jie, Chen, Yuanhang, Jia, Haoyue, Zhang, Tao, Wu, Minna, Song, Xiangfeng, Tian, Zhongwei, Yu, Liyan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10269824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36507683
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01188-22
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author Yan, Dong
Li, Min
Si, Wenhao
Ni, Shijun
Liu, Xin
Chang, Yahan
Guo, Xiaochan
Wang, Jingjing
Bai, Jie
Chen, Yuanhang
Jia, Haoyue
Zhang, Tao
Wu, Minna
Song, Xiangfeng
Tian, Zhongwei
Yu, Liyan
author_facet Yan, Dong
Li, Min
Si, Wenhao
Ni, Shijun
Liu, Xin
Chang, Yahan
Guo, Xiaochan
Wang, Jingjing
Bai, Jie
Chen, Yuanhang
Jia, Haoyue
Zhang, Tao
Wu, Minna
Song, Xiangfeng
Tian, Zhongwei
Yu, Liyan
author_sort Yan, Dong
collection PubMed
description Haze pollution has been a public health issue. The skin microbiota, as a component of the first line of defense, is disturbed by environmental pollutants, which may have an impact on human health. A total of 74 skin samples from healthy students were collected during haze and nonhaze days in spring and winter. Significant differences of skin fungal community composition between haze and nonhaze days were observed in female and male samples in spring and male samples in winter based on unweighted UniFrac distance analysis. Phylogenetic diversity whole-tree indices and observed features were significantly increased during haze days in male samples in winter compared to nonhaze days, but no significant difference was observed in other groups. Dothideomycetes, Capnodiales, Mycosphaerellaceae, etc. were significantly enriched during nonhaze days, whereas Trichocomaceae, Talaromyces, and Pezizaceae were significantly enriched during haze days. Thus, five Talaromyces strains were isolated, and an in vitro culture experiment revealed that the growth of representative Talaromyces strains was increased at high concentrations of particulate matter, confirming the sequencing results. Furthermore, during haze days, the fungal community assembly was better fitted to a niche-based assembly model than during nonhaze days. Talaromyces enriched during haze days deviated from the neutral assembly process. Our findings provided a comprehensive characterization of the skin fungal community during haze and nonhaze days and elucidated novel insights into how haze exposure influences the skin fungal community. IMPORTANCE Skin fungi play an important role in human health. Particulate matter (PM), the main haze pollutant, has been a public environmental threat. However, few studies have assessed the effects of air pollutants on skin fungi. Here, haze exposure influenced the diversity and composition of the skin fungal community. In an in vitro experiment, a high concentration of PM promoted the growth of Talaromyces strains. The fungal community assembly is better fitted to a niche-based assembly model during haze days. We anticipate that this study may provide new insights on the role of haze exposure disturbing the skin fungal community. It lays the groundwork for further clarifying the association between the changes of the skin fungal community and adverse health outcomes. Our study is the first to report the changes in the skin fungal community during haze and nonhaze days, which expands the understanding of the relationship between haze and skin fungi.
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spelling pubmed-102698242023-06-16 Haze Exposure Changes the Skin Fungal Community and Promotes the Growth of Talaromyces Strains Yan, Dong Li, Min Si, Wenhao Ni, Shijun Liu, Xin Chang, Yahan Guo, Xiaochan Wang, Jingjing Bai, Jie Chen, Yuanhang Jia, Haoyue Zhang, Tao Wu, Minna Song, Xiangfeng Tian, Zhongwei Yu, Liyan Microbiol Spectr Research Article Haze pollution has been a public health issue. The skin microbiota, as a component of the first line of defense, is disturbed by environmental pollutants, which may have an impact on human health. A total of 74 skin samples from healthy students were collected during haze and nonhaze days in spring and winter. Significant differences of skin fungal community composition between haze and nonhaze days were observed in female and male samples in spring and male samples in winter based on unweighted UniFrac distance analysis. Phylogenetic diversity whole-tree indices and observed features were significantly increased during haze days in male samples in winter compared to nonhaze days, but no significant difference was observed in other groups. Dothideomycetes, Capnodiales, Mycosphaerellaceae, etc. were significantly enriched during nonhaze days, whereas Trichocomaceae, Talaromyces, and Pezizaceae were significantly enriched during haze days. Thus, five Talaromyces strains were isolated, and an in vitro culture experiment revealed that the growth of representative Talaromyces strains was increased at high concentrations of particulate matter, confirming the sequencing results. Furthermore, during haze days, the fungal community assembly was better fitted to a niche-based assembly model than during nonhaze days. Talaromyces enriched during haze days deviated from the neutral assembly process. Our findings provided a comprehensive characterization of the skin fungal community during haze and nonhaze days and elucidated novel insights into how haze exposure influences the skin fungal community. IMPORTANCE Skin fungi play an important role in human health. Particulate matter (PM), the main haze pollutant, has been a public environmental threat. However, few studies have assessed the effects of air pollutants on skin fungi. Here, haze exposure influenced the diversity and composition of the skin fungal community. In an in vitro experiment, a high concentration of PM promoted the growth of Talaromyces strains. The fungal community assembly is better fitted to a niche-based assembly model during haze days. We anticipate that this study may provide new insights on the role of haze exposure disturbing the skin fungal community. It lays the groundwork for further clarifying the association between the changes of the skin fungal community and adverse health outcomes. Our study is the first to report the changes in the skin fungal community during haze and nonhaze days, which expands the understanding of the relationship between haze and skin fungi. American Society for Microbiology 2022-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10269824/ /pubmed/36507683 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01188-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Yan et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Yan, Dong
Li, Min
Si, Wenhao
Ni, Shijun
Liu, Xin
Chang, Yahan
Guo, Xiaochan
Wang, Jingjing
Bai, Jie
Chen, Yuanhang
Jia, Haoyue
Zhang, Tao
Wu, Minna
Song, Xiangfeng
Tian, Zhongwei
Yu, Liyan
Haze Exposure Changes the Skin Fungal Community and Promotes the Growth of Talaromyces Strains
title Haze Exposure Changes the Skin Fungal Community and Promotes the Growth of Talaromyces Strains
title_full Haze Exposure Changes the Skin Fungal Community and Promotes the Growth of Talaromyces Strains
title_fullStr Haze Exposure Changes the Skin Fungal Community and Promotes the Growth of Talaromyces Strains
title_full_unstemmed Haze Exposure Changes the Skin Fungal Community and Promotes the Growth of Talaromyces Strains
title_short Haze Exposure Changes the Skin Fungal Community and Promotes the Growth of Talaromyces Strains
title_sort haze exposure changes the skin fungal community and promotes the growth of talaromyces strains
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10269824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36507683
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01188-22
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