Affiliation:
1. China Pharmaceutical Culture Collection, Institute of Medicinal Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, People's Republic of China
2. Department of Microbiology, School of Basic Medical Sciences, Xinxiang Medical University, Xinxiang, People's Republic of China
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The structural variation of the bacterial community associated with particulate matter (PM) was assessed in an urban area of Beijing during hazy and nonhazy days. Sampling for different PM fractions (PM
2.5
[<2.5 μm], PM
10
[<10 μm], and total suspended particulate) was conducted using three portable air samplers from September 2014 to February 2015. The airborne bacterial community in these samples was analyzed using the Illumina MiSeq platform with bacterium-specific primers targeting the 16S rRNA gene. A total of 1,707,072 reads belonging to 6,009 operational taxonomic units were observed. The airborne bacterial community composition was significantly affected by PM fractions (
R
= 0.157,
P
< 0.01). In addition, the relative abundances of several genera significantly differed between samples with various haze levels; for example,
Methylobacillus
,
Tumebacillus
, and
Desulfurispora
spp. increased in heavy-haze days. Canonical correspondence analysis and permutation tests showed that temperature, SO
2
concentration, relative humidity, PM
10
concentration, and CO concentration were significant factors that associated with airborne bacterial community composition. Only six genera increased across PM
10
samples (
Dokdonella
,
Caenimonas
,
Geminicoccus
, and
Sphingopyxis
) and PM
2.5
samples (
Cellulomonas
and
Rhizobacter
), while a large number of taxa significantly increased in total suspended particulate samples, such as
Paracoccus
,
Kocuria
, and
Sphingomonas
. Network analysis indicated that
Paracoccus
,
Rubellimicrobium
,
Kocuria
, and
Arthrobacter
were the key genera in the airborne PM samples. Overall, the findings presented here suggest that diverse airborne bacterial communities are associated with PM and provide further understanding of bacterial community structure in the atmosphere during hazy and nonhazy days.
IMPORTANCE
The results presented here represent an analysis of the airborne bacterial community associated with particulate matter (PM) and advance our understanding of the structural variation of these communities. We observed a shift in bacterial community composition with PM fractions but no significant difference with haze levels. This may be because the bacterial differences are obscured by high bacterial diversity in the atmosphere. However, we also observed that a few genera (such as
Methylobacillus
,
Tumebacillus
, and
Desulfurispora
) increased significantly on heavy-haze days. In addition,
Paracoccus
,
Rubellimicrobium
,
Kocuria
, and
Arthrobacter
were the key genera in the airborne PM samples. Accurate and real-time techniques, such as metagenomics and metatranscriptomics, should be developed for a future survey of the relationship of airborne bacteria and haze.
Funder
National Infrastructure of Microbial Resources
CAMS Innovation Fund for Medical Science
863 Program
National Science and Technology Project of China
National Major New Drug Creation Program
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology