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Evidence for Environmental–Human Microbiota Transfer at a Manufacturing Facility with Novel Work-related Respiratory Disease

Authors :
Bianca Kapoor
Timothy C. Borbet
Thomas V. Colby
Peter Meyn
Jose C. Clemente
Jean M. Cox-Ganser
Zhan Gao
Douglas Wendland
Francis H. Y. Green
Martin J. Blaser
Randall J. Nett
Benjamin G. Wu
Randy Boylstein
Marc Veillette
Caroline Duchaine
Marcia L. Stanton
Soma Sanyal
Angela Franko
Imran Sulaiman
Vance D. Bachelder
Adriana Heguy
Maryaline Coffre
Sergei B. Koralov
Robert J. Tallaksen
Kristin J. Cummings
M. Abbas Virji
Leopoldo N. Segal
Kathleen Kreiss
Ju-Hyeong Park
Sarah Lundeen
Nicole T Edwards
Yonghua Li
Krista Warren
Jerrold L. Abraham
Judith A. Crawford
Source :
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 202:1678-1688
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Thoracic Society, 2020.

Abstract

Rationale: Workers' exposure to metalworking fluid (MWF) has been associated with respiratory disease.Objectives: As part of a public health investigation of a manufacturing facility, we performed a cross-sectional study using paired environmental and human sampling to evaluate the cross-pollination of microbes between the environment and the host and possible effects on lung pathology present among workers.Methods: Workplace environmental microbiota were evaluated in air and MWF samples. Human microbiota were evaluated in lung tissue samples from workers with respiratory symptoms found to have lymphocytic bronchiolitis and alveolar ductitis with B-cell follicles and emphysema, in lung tissue samples from control subjects, and in skin, nasal, and oral samples from 302 workers from different areas of the facility. In vitro effects of MWF exposure on murine B cells were assessed.Measurements and Main Results: An increased similarity of microbial composition was found between MWF samples and lung tissue samples of case workers compared with control subjects. Among workers in different locations within the facility, those that worked in the machine shop area had skin, nasal, and oral microbiota more closely related to the microbiota present in the MWF samples. Lung samples from four index cases and skin and nasal samples from workers in the machine shop area were enriched with Pseudomonas, the dominant taxa in MWF. Exposure to used MWF stimulated murine B-cell proliferation in vitro, a hallmark cell subtype found in the pathology of index cases.Conclusions: Evaluation of a manufacturing facility with a cluster of workers with respiratory disease supports cross-pollination of microbes from MWF to humans and suggests the potential for exposure to these microbes to be a health hazard.

Details

ISSN :
15354970 and 1073449X
Volume :
202
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bd29f2bdba974517a0498c31b2f2d65f