Cargando…

Walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity

Although human occupancy is a source of airborne bacteria, the role of walkers on bacterial communities in built environments is poorly understood. Therefore, we visualized the impact of walker occupancy combined with other factors (temperature, humidity, atmospheric pressure, dust particles) on air...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Okubo, Torahiko, Osaki, Takako, Nozaki, Eriko, Uemura, Akira, Sakai, Kouhei, Matushita, Mizue, Matsuo, Junji, Nakamura, Shinji, Kamiya, Shigeru, Yamaguchi, Hiroyuki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5602640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28922412
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184980
_version_ 1783264595683573760
author Okubo, Torahiko
Osaki, Takako
Nozaki, Eriko
Uemura, Akira
Sakai, Kouhei
Matushita, Mizue
Matsuo, Junji
Nakamura, Shinji
Kamiya, Shigeru
Yamaguchi, Hiroyuki
author_facet Okubo, Torahiko
Osaki, Takako
Nozaki, Eriko
Uemura, Akira
Sakai, Kouhei
Matushita, Mizue
Matsuo, Junji
Nakamura, Shinji
Kamiya, Shigeru
Yamaguchi, Hiroyuki
author_sort Okubo, Torahiko
collection PubMed
description Although human occupancy is a source of airborne bacteria, the role of walkers on bacterial communities in built environments is poorly understood. Therefore, we visualized the impact of walker occupancy combined with other factors (temperature, humidity, atmospheric pressure, dust particles) on airborne bacterial features in the Sapporo underground pedestrian space in Sapporo, Japan. Air samples (n = 18; 4,800L/each sample) were collected at 8:00 h to 20:00 h on 3 days (regular sampling) and at early morning / late night (5:50 h to 7:50 h / 22:15 h to 24:45 h) on a day (baseline sampling), and the number of CFUs (colony forming units) OTUs (operational taxonomic units) and other factors were determined. The results revealed that temperature, humidity, and atmospheric pressure changed with weather. The number of walkers increased greatly in the morning and evening on each regular sampling day, although total walker numbers did not differ significantly among regular sampling days. A slight increase in small dust particles (0.3–0.5μm) was observed on the days with higher temperature regardless of regular or baseline sampling. At the period on regular sampling, CFU levels varied irregularly among days, and the OTUs of 22-phylum types were observed, with the majority being from Firmicutes or Proteobacteria (γ-), including Staphylococcus sp. derived from human individuals. The data obtained from regular samplings reveled that although no direct interaction of walker occupancy and airborne CFU and OTU features was observed upon Pearson's correlation analysis, cluster analysis indicated an obvious lineage consisting of walker occupancy, CFU numbers, OTU types, small dust particles, and seasonal factors (including temperature and humidity). Meanwhile, at the period on baseline sampling both walker and CFU numbers were similarly minimal. Taken together, the results revealed a positive correlation of walker occupancy with airborne bacteria that increased with increases in temperature and humidity in the presence of airborne small particles. Moreover, the results indicated that small dust particles at high temperature and humidity may be a crucial factor responsible for stabilizing the bacteria released from walkers in built environments. The findings presented herein advance our knowledge and understanding of the relationship between humans and bacterial communities in built environments, and will help improve public health in urban communities.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5602640
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-56026402017-09-22 Walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity Okubo, Torahiko Osaki, Takako Nozaki, Eriko Uemura, Akira Sakai, Kouhei Matushita, Mizue Matsuo, Junji Nakamura, Shinji Kamiya, Shigeru Yamaguchi, Hiroyuki PLoS One Research Article Although human occupancy is a source of airborne bacteria, the role of walkers on bacterial communities in built environments is poorly understood. Therefore, we visualized the impact of walker occupancy combined with other factors (temperature, humidity, atmospheric pressure, dust particles) on airborne bacterial features in the Sapporo underground pedestrian space in Sapporo, Japan. Air samples (n = 18; 4,800L/each sample) were collected at 8:00 h to 20:00 h on 3 days (regular sampling) and at early morning / late night (5:50 h to 7:50 h / 22:15 h to 24:45 h) on a day (baseline sampling), and the number of CFUs (colony forming units) OTUs (operational taxonomic units) and other factors were determined. The results revealed that temperature, humidity, and atmospheric pressure changed with weather. The number of walkers increased greatly in the morning and evening on each regular sampling day, although total walker numbers did not differ significantly among regular sampling days. A slight increase in small dust particles (0.3–0.5μm) was observed on the days with higher temperature regardless of regular or baseline sampling. At the period on regular sampling, CFU levels varied irregularly among days, and the OTUs of 22-phylum types were observed, with the majority being from Firmicutes or Proteobacteria (γ-), including Staphylococcus sp. derived from human individuals. The data obtained from regular samplings reveled that although no direct interaction of walker occupancy and airborne CFU and OTU features was observed upon Pearson's correlation analysis, cluster analysis indicated an obvious lineage consisting of walker occupancy, CFU numbers, OTU types, small dust particles, and seasonal factors (including temperature and humidity). Meanwhile, at the period on baseline sampling both walker and CFU numbers were similarly minimal. Taken together, the results revealed a positive correlation of walker occupancy with airborne bacteria that increased with increases in temperature and humidity in the presence of airborne small particles. Moreover, the results indicated that small dust particles at high temperature and humidity may be a crucial factor responsible for stabilizing the bacteria released from walkers in built environments. The findings presented herein advance our knowledge and understanding of the relationship between humans and bacterial communities in built environments, and will help improve public health in urban communities. Public Library of Science 2017-09-18 /pmc/articles/PMC5602640/ /pubmed/28922412 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184980 Text en © 2017 Okubo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Okubo, Torahiko
Osaki, Takako
Nozaki, Eriko
Uemura, Akira
Sakai, Kouhei
Matushita, Mizue
Matsuo, Junji
Nakamura, Shinji
Kamiya, Shigeru
Yamaguchi, Hiroyuki
Walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity
title Walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity
title_full Walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity
title_fullStr Walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity
title_full_unstemmed Walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity
title_short Walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity
title_sort walker occupancy has an impact on changing airborne bacterial communities in an underground pedestrian space, as small-dust particles increased with raising both temperature and humidity
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5602640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28922412
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184980
work_keys_str_mv AT okubotorahiko walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT osakitakako walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT nozakieriko walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT uemuraakira walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT sakaikouhei walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT matushitamizue walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT matsuojunji walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT nakamurashinji walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT kamiyashigeru walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity
AT yamaguchihiroyuki walkeroccupancyhasanimpactonchangingairbornebacterialcommunitiesinanundergroundpedestrianspaceassmalldustparticlesincreasedwithraisingbothtemperatureandhumidity