4.7 Article

The ignored diversity: complex bacterial communities in intensive care units revealed by 16S pyrosequencing

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 3, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/srep01413

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Funding

  1. Federal Ministry of Economy, Family and Youth (BMWFJ)
  2. Federal Ministry of Traffic, Innovation and Technology (bmvit)
  3. Styrian Business Promotion Agency SFG
  4. Standortagentur Tirol
  5. ZIT - Technology Agency of the City of Vienna through the COMET-Funding Program

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Indoor microbial communities play an important role in everyday human health, especially in the intensive care units (ICUs) of hospitals. We used amplicon pyrosequencing to study the ICU microbiome and were able to detect diverse sequences, in comparison to the currently used standard cultivation technique that only detected 2.5% of the total bacterial diversity. The phylogenetic spectrum combined species associated with the outside environment, taxa closely related to potential human pathogens, and beneficials as well as included 7 phyla and 76 genera. In addition, Propionibacterium spp., Pseudomonas spp., and Burkholderia spp. were identified as important sources of infections. Despite significantly different bacterial area profiles for floors, medical devices, and workplaces, similarities by network analyses and strains with identical molecular fingerprints were detected. This information will allow for new assessment of public health risks in ICUs, help create new sanitation protocols, and further our understanding of the development of hospital-acquired infections.

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