Noah Fierer /certificate/iqbiology/ en A Global Survey of Mycobacterial Diversity in Soil /certificate/iqbiology/2019/08/14/global-survey-mycobacterial-diversity-soil A Global Survey of Mycobacterial Diversity in Soil Anonymous (not verified) Tue, 08/13/2019 - 18:00 Categories: Publications Tags: Corinne Walsh Noah Fierer Corinne Walsh Matthew Gebert Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo Fernando Maestre Noah Fierer

Mycobacteria are a diverse bacterial group ubiquitous in many soil and aquatic environments. Members of this group have been associated with human and other animal diseases, including the nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM), which are of growing relevance to public health worldwide. Although soils are often considered an important source of environmentally acquired NTM infections, the biodiversity and ecological preferences of soil mycobacteria remain largely unexplored across contrasting climates and ecosystem types. Using a culture-independent approach by combining 16S rRNA marker gene sequencing with mycobacterium-specific hsp65gene sequencing, we analyzed the diversity, distributions, and environmental preferences of soil-dwelling mycobacteria in 143 soil samples collected from a broad range of ecosystem types. The surveyed soils harbored highly diverse mycobacterial communities that span the full extent of the known mycobacterial phylogeny, with most soil mycobacteria (97% of mycobacterial clades) belonging to previously undescribed lineages. While mycobacteria tended to have higher relative abundances in cool, wet, and acidic soil environments, several individual mycobacterial clades had contrasting environmental preferences. We identified the environmental preferences of many mycobacterial clades, including the clinically relevant Mycobacterium avium complex that was more commonly detected in wet and acidic soils. However, most of the soil mycobacteria detected were not closely related to known pathogens, calling into question previous assumptions about the general importance of soil as a source of NTM infections. Together, this work provides novel insights into the diversity, distributions, and ecological preferences of soil mycobacteria and lays the foundation for future efforts to link mycobacterial phenotypes to their distributions.

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Wed, 14 Aug 2019 00:00:00 +0000 Anonymous 655 at /certificate/iqbiology
The slime on your showerhead is ALIVE: Study reveals the horrifying bacteria in your bathroom - and how it could be harming you /certificate/iqbiology/2018/11/01/slime-your-showerhead-alive-study-reveals-horrifying-bacteria-your-bathroom-and-how-it The slime on your showerhead is ALIVE: Study reveals the horrifying bacteria in your bathroom - and how it could be harming you Anonymous (not verified) Thu, 11/01/2018 - 18:00 Categories: Publications Tags: Noah Fierer Mark Prigg DailyMail

A study of the bacterial slime in showerheads across the world has found US cities are hotspots for potentially harmful bacteria.

Researchers found that mycobacteria is the most common bacteria in showerheads.

They found it is far more prevalent in the United States than in Europe, thrives more in municipal tap water than in well water, and is especially common in geographical 'hot spots' where certain types of lung disease caused by mycobacteria are also common.

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Fri, 02 Nov 2018 00:00:00 +0000 Anonymous 493 at /certificate/iqbiology