Mice lung microbiomes' variable responses to dust exposure
收藏DataCite Commons2026-01-29 更新2026-04-25 收录
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https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.95x69p8xh
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资源简介:
Inhalation of dust is significant and relevant to health effects. As
pollution and climate change worsen in dryland regions, wind currents
entrain loose sediment and dust. This potentially disperses toxic
geochemical and microbial burdens throughout the region. When inhaled
environmental dust and host-associated microbiomes mingle, they pose
exposure risks to host respiratory health. The Salton Sea, California’s
largest lake, is shrinking thus exposing nearby communities to playa dust.
Therefore, we analyze the effect of Salton Sea dust exposure in murine
models to relate lung microbial communities and respiratory health. We
used an environmental chamber to expose mice to dust filtrate or ambient
air and examined the effects of those exposures on lung microbiomes. We
found that lung microbial composition varied by dust exposure.
Furthermore, dust elicited neutrophil recruitment and immune responses
more than mice exposed to ambient air. Sources of dust differentially
affected the composition of the lung core microbiome. Lung microbial
diversity correlated with neutrophil recruitment as lungs associated with
inflammatory responses harbored more diverse microbiomes. Although Salton
Sea dust influences dust microbiomes and prevalent taxa, these responses
were variable. The composition of lungs exposed to dust collected further
from the Sea was more similar to lungs from ambient air exposures; in
contrast, dust collected near the Sea yielded lung microbiomes that
clustered further from lungs exposed to ambient air. As lakes continue to
dry out, we expect greater public health risks in proximal dryland
regions, which may correlate with dust microbial dispersal-related changes
to lung microbiomes.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2025-10-12



