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Proteobacteria from the human skin microbiota: Species-level diversity and hypotheses

Authors :
C. Cosseau
S. Romano-Bertrand
H. Duplan
O. Lucas
I. Ingrassia
C. Pigasse
C. Roques
E. Jumas-Bilak
Source :
One Health, Vol 2, Iss C, Pp 33-41 (2016)
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2016.

Abstract

The human skin microbiota is quantitatively dominated by Gram-positive bacteria, detected by both culture and metagenomics. However, metagenomics revealed a huge variety of Gram-negative taxa generally considered from environmental origin. For species affiliation of bacteria in skin microbiota, clones of 16S rRNA gene and colonies growing on diverse culture media were analyzed. Species-level identification was achieved for 81% of both clones and colonies. Fifty species distributed in 26 genera were identified by culture, mostly belonging to Actinobacteria and Firmicutes, while 45 species-level operational taxonomic units distributed in 30 genera were detected by sequencing, with a high diversity of Proteobacteria. This mixed approach allowed the detection of 100% of the genera forming the known core skin Gram-negative microbiota and 43% of the known diversity of Gram-negative genera in human skin. The orphan genera represented 50% of the current skin pan-microbiota. Improved culture conditions allowed the isolation of Roseomonas mucosa, Aurantimonas altamirensis and Agrobacterium tumefaciens strains from healthy skin. For proteobacterial species previously described in the environment, we proposed the existence of skin-specific ecotypes, which might play a role in the fine-tuning of skin homeostasis and opportunistic infections but also act as a shuttle between environmental and human microbial communities. Therefore, skin-associated proteobacteria deserve to be considered in the One-Health concept connecting human health to the health of animals and the environment.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23527714
Volume :
2
Issue :
C
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
One Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.713b13cfe7884158b27ce5d4b8ce8771
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2016.02.002