Spatial and temporal patterns of public transit aerobiomes
Russell J. S. Orr, Ola Brynildsrud, Kari O. Bøifot, Jostein Gohli, Gunnar Skogan, Frank J. Kelly, Mark T. Hernandez, Klas Udekwu, Patrick K. H. Lee, Christopher E. Mason, Marius Dybwad

TL;DR
This study explores the diversity and patterns of microbes in public transit systems across six global cities over three years, focusing on bacteria and fungi.
Contribution
The study provides the first city-specific microbial cores in public transit systems and emphasizes the importance of robust bioinformatics for low-biomass samples.
Findings
Cities show distinct bacterial and fungal signatures in their public transit aerobiomes.
Bacteria dominate public transit aerobiomes, with no single global species being dominant.
A robust bioinformatics pipeline is essential for accurate analysis of low-biomass environmental samples.
Abstract
Aerobiome diversity is extensive; however, species-level community structure remains poorly resolved. Likewise, microbiomes of public transit systems are of public interest due to their importance for health, though few studies have focused on these ecosystems whilst utilising shotgun metagenomics. Aerosol studies have focused predominantly on individual cities, with limited between-city comparisons suggesting specific community structures. Longitudinal studies show aerobiome diversity as dynamic, fluctuating during seasonal and daily cycles, though interannual cycles remains to be considered. Further, a bacterial bias has limited fungal aerobiome studies, with few considering both fractions collectively. As such, the objective of this study was to examine spatial and temporal patterns in the species diversity of public transit aerobiomes, with an emphasis on bacteria and fungi. Air…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsIndoor Air Quality and Microbial Exposure · Microbial Community Ecology and Physiology · Building materials and conservation
