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Shotgun pyrosequencing metagenomic analyses of dusts from swine confinement and grain facilities. | LitMetric

Shotgun pyrosequencing metagenomic analyses of dusts from swine confinement and grain facilities.

PLoS One

Veterans Nebraska Western Iowa Healthcare System, Omaha, NE, USA and University of Nebraska Medical Center, Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep Medicine & Allergy Division, Omaha, Nebraska, United States of America; University of Nebraska Medical Center, Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep Medicine & Allergy Division, Omaha, Nebraska, United States of America; University of Nebraska Medical Center, Department of Epidemiology, Omaha, Nebraska, United States of America.

Published: May 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Inhalation of agricultural dust can lead to various inflammatory reactions and chronic respiratory diseases, largely due to microbial components in the dust.
  • A study analyzed agricultural dust from swine facilities and grain elevators using metagenomic sequencing, revealing significant differences in microbial content, particularly with swine dust being rich in gram-positive bacteria.
  • The findings indicate that swine confinement facility dust has a unique microbiota profile, dominated by certain bacterial genera, while grain elevator and pet-free household dusts show lower levels of mammalian origin microbes.

Article Abstract

Inhalation of agricultural dusts causes inflammatory reactions and symptoms such as headache, fever, and malaise, which can progress to chronic airway inflammation and associated diseases, e.g. asthma, chronic bronchitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and hypersensitivity pneumonitis. Although in many agricultural environments feed particles are the major constituent of these dusts, the inflammatory responses that they provoke are likely attributable to particle-associated bacteria, archaebacteria, fungi, and viruses. In this study, we performed shotgun pyrosequencing metagenomic analyses of DNA from dusts from swine confinement facilities or grain elevators, with comparisons to dusts from pet-free households. DNA sequence alignment showed that 19% or 62% of shotgun pyrosequencing metagenomic DNA sequence reads from swine facility or household dusts, respectively, were of swine or human origin, respectively. In contrast only 2% of such reads from grain elevator dust were of mammalian origin. These metagenomic shotgun reads of mammalian origin were excluded from our analyses of agricultural dust microbiota. The ten most prevalent bacterial taxa identified in swine facility compared to grain elevator or household dust were comprised of 75%, 16%, and 42% gram-positive organisms, respectively. Four of the top five swine facility dust genera were assignable (Clostridium, Lactobacillus, Ruminococcus, and Eubacterium, ranging from 4% to 19% relative abundance). The relative abundances of these four genera were lower in dust from grain elevators or pet-free households. These analyses also highlighted the predominance in swine facility dust of Firmicutes (70%) at the phylum level, Clostridia (44%) at the Class level, and Clostridiales at the Order level (41%). In summary, shotgun pyrosequencing metagenomic analyses of agricultural dusts show that they differ qualitatively and quantitatively at the level of microbial taxa present, and that the bioinformatic analyses used for such studies must be carefully designed to avoid the potential contribution of non-microbial DNA, e.g. from resident mammals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3991671PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0095578PLOS

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