Form of presentation | Articles in international journals and collections |
Year of publication | 2017 |
Язык | английский |
|
Galickaya Polina Yurevna, author
|
Bibliographic description in the original language |
Parajuli A, Grönroos M, Kauppi S, The abundance of health-associated bacteria is altered in PAH polluted soils - Implications for health in urban areas?//PLoS ONE. - 2017. - Vol.12, Is.11. - Art. № e0187852. |
Annotation |
Long-term exposure to polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) has been connected to chronic
human health disorders. It is also well-known that i) PAH contamination alters soil bacterial
communities, ii) human microbiome is associated with environmental microbiome, and iii)
alteration in the abundance of members in several bacterial phyla is associated with adverse
or beneficial human health effects. We hypothesized that soil pollution by PAHs altered soil
bacterial communities that had known associations with human health. The rationale behind
our study was to increase understanding and potentially facilitate reconsidering factors that
lead to health disorders in areas characterized by PAH contamination. Large containers
filled with either spruce forest soil, pine forest soil, peat, or glacial sand were left to incubate
or contaminated with creosote. Biological degradation of PAHs was monitored using GCMS, and the bacterial community composition was analyzed using 454 pyrosequencing.
Proteobacteria had higher and Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes had lower relative abundance in creosote contaminated soils than in non-contaminated soils. Earlier studies have
demonstrated that an increase in the abundance of Proteobacteria and decreased abundance of the phyla Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes are particularly associated with
adverse health outcomes and immunological disorders. Therefore, we propose that pollution-induced shifts in natural soil bacterial community, like in PAH-polluted areas, can contribute to the prevalence of chronic diseases. We encourage studies that simultaneously
address the classic “adverse toxin effect” paradigm and our novel “altered environmental
microbiome” hypothesis |
Keywords |
health, actinobacteria, disorders |
The name of the journal |
PLos ONE
|
URL |
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85034604138&doi=10.1371%2fjournal.pone.0187852&partnerID=40&md5=daf04338cd62c181266837cb929913e3 |
Please use this ID to quote from or refer to the card |
https://repository.kpfu.ru/eng/?p_id=231435&p_lang=2 |
Full metadata record |
Field DC |
Value |
Language |
dc.contributor.author |
Galickaya Polina Yurevna |
ru_RU |
dc.date.accessioned |
2017-01-01T00:00:00Z |
ru_RU |
dc.date.available |
2017-01-01T00:00:00Z |
ru_RU |
dc.date.issued |
2017 |
ru_RU |
dc.identifier.citation |
Parajuli A, Grönroos M, Kauppi S, The abundance of health-associated bacteria is altered in PAH polluted soils - Implications for health in urban areas?//PLoS ONE. - 2017. - Vol.12, Is.11. - Art. № e0187852. |
ru_RU |
dc.identifier.uri |
https://repository.kpfu.ru/eng/?p_id=231435&p_lang=2 |
ru_RU |
dc.description.abstract |
PLos ONE |
ru_RU |
dc.description.abstract |
Long-term exposure to polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) has been connected to chronic
human health disorders. It is also well-known that i) PAH contamination alters soil bacterial
communities, ii) human microbiome is associated with environmental microbiome, and iii)
alteration in the abundance of members in several bacterial phyla is associated with adverse
or beneficial human health effects. We hypothesized that soil pollution by PAHs altered soil
bacterial communities that had known associations with human health. The rationale behind
our study was to increase understanding and potentially facilitate reconsidering factors that
lead to health disorders in areas characterized by PAH contamination. Large containers
filled with either spruce forest soil, pine forest soil, peat, or glacial sand were left to incubate
or contaminated with creosote. Biological degradation of PAHs was monitored using GCMS, and the bacterial community composition was analyzed using 454 pyrosequencing.
Proteobacteria had higher and Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes had lower relative abundance in creosote contaminated soils than in non-contaminated soils. Earlier studies have
demonstrated that an increase in the abundance of Proteobacteria and decreased abundance of the phyla Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes are particularly associated with
adverse health outcomes and immunological disorders. Therefore, we propose that pollution-induced shifts in natural soil bacterial community, like in PAH-polluted areas, can contribute to the prevalence of chronic diseases. We encourage studies that simultaneously
address the classic “adverse toxin effect” paradigm and our novel “altered environmental
microbiome” hypothesis |
ru_RU |
dc.language.iso |
ru |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
health |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
actinobacteria |
ru_RU |
dc.subject |
disorders |
ru_RU |
dc.title |
The abundance of health-associated bacteria is altered in PAH polluted soils - Implications for health in urban areas? |
ru_RU |
dc.type |
Articles in international journals and collections |
ru_RU |
|