Community assembly of the human piercing microbiome.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1E13DD7C9184
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Community assembly of the human piercing microbiome.
Journal
Proceedings. Biological sciences
Author(s)
Xu CCY, Lemoine J., Albert A., Whirter É.M., Barrett RDH
ISSN
1471-2954 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0962-8452
Publication state
Published
Issued date
29/11/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
290
Number
2011
Pages
20231174
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Predicting how biological communities respond to disturbance requires understanding the forces that govern their assembly. We propose using human skin piercings as a model system for studying community assembly after rapid environmental change. Local skin sterilization provides a 'clean slate' within the novel ecological niche created by the piercing. Stochastic assembly processes can dominate skin microbiomes due to the influence of environmental exposure on local dispersal, but deterministic processes might play a greater role within occluded skin piercings if piercing habitats impose strong selection pressures on colonizing species. Here we explore the human ear-piercing microbiome and demonstrate that community assembly is predominantly stochastic but becomes significantly more deterministic with time, producing increasingly diverse and ecologically complex communities. We also observed changes in two dominant and medically relevant antagonists (Cutibacterium acnes and Staphylococcus epidermidis), consistent with competitive exclusion induced by a transition from sebaceous to moist environments. By exploiting this common yet uniquely human practice, we show that skin piercings are not just culturally significant but also represent ecosystem engineering on the human body. The novel habitats and communities that skin piercings produce may provide general insights into biological responses to environmental disturbances with implications for both ecosystem and human health.
Keywords
Humans, Ecosystem, Bacteria, Biota, Microbiota, Stochastic Processes, 16S, bacteria, biodiversity, ecological niche, environmental change, skin microbiome
Pubmed
Create date
04/12/2023 15:12
Last modification date
05/12/2023 8:05
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