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Forensic analysis of the microbiome of phones and shoes. | LitMetric

Forensic analysis of the microbiome of phones and shoes.

Microbiome

Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology, Biosciences Department, Argonne National Laboratory, 9700 South Cass Avenue, Argonne, IL 60439 USA ; Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, 1101 E 57th Street, Chicago, IL 60637 USA ; Graduate Program in Biophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, 5801 South Ellis Avenue, Chicago, USA ; Marine Biological Laboratory, 7 MBL Street, Woods Hole, MA 02543 USA ; College of Environmental and Resource Sciences, Zhejiang University, 38 Zheda Road, Hangzhou, 310058 China.

Published: May 2015

Background: Microbial interaction between human-associated objects and the environments we inhabit may have forensic implications, and the extent to which microbes are shared between individuals inhabiting the same space may be relevant to human health and disease transmission. In this study, two participants sampled the front and back of their cell phones, four different locations on the soles of their shoes, and the floor beneath them every waking hour over a 2-day period. A further 89 participants took individual samples of their shoes and phones at three different scientific conferences.

Results: Samples taken from different surface types maintained significantly different microbial community structures. The impact of the floor microbial community on that of the shoe environments was strong and immediate, as evidenced by Procrustes analysis of shoe replicates and significant correlation between shoe and floor samples taken at the same time point. Supervised learning was highly effective at determining which participant had taken a given shoe or phone sample, and a Bayesian method was able to determine which participant had taken each shoe sample based entirely on its similarity to the floor samples. Both shoe and phone samples taken by conference participants clustered into distinct groups based on location, though much more so when an unweighted distance metric was used, suggesting sharing of low-abundance microbial taxa between individuals inhabiting the same space.

Conclusions: Correlations between microbial community sources and sinks allow for inference of the interactions between humans and their environment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4427962PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40168-015-0082-9DOI Listing

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