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Spatial and temporal patterns of public transit aerobiomes
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

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, …
Microbiome, Vol.14, pp.1-22
01/19/2026
PMID: 41555453

Abstract

Fungi Shotgun Low-biomass Aerosol Microbiome Bacteria
Background 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. Results Air samples taken over a 3-year period (2017–2019) from six global cities were subjected to shotgun metagenomic sequencing. Improved classification databases, notably for fungi, applying stringent parameters for trimming, exogenous contamination removal and classification yielded high species-level resolution. Microbial diversity varied substantially among cities, while human and environmental factors, recorded in parallel, were of secondary significance. Bacteria dominated the public transit aerobiome with increased presence in cities with higher population densities. All aerobiomes had complex compositions, consisting of hundreds to thousands of species. Interannual variation had limited significance on the public transit aerobiome diversity and community structure. Conclusions Cities were the most important factor contributing to diversity and community structure, demonstrating specific bacterial and fungal signatures. Further, possible correlation between geographical distance and genetic signatures of aerobiomes is suggested. Bacteria are the most abundant constituent of public transit aerobiomes, though no single species is globally dominant, conversely indicating a large inter-city variation in community structure. The presence of a ubiquitous global species core is rejected, though an aerobiome sub-core is confirmed. For the first time, local public transit aerobiome cores are presented for each city and related to ecological niches. Further, the importance of a robust bioinformatics analysis pipeline to identify and remove exogenous contaminants for studying low-biomass samples is highlighted. Lastly, a core and sub-core definition of contaminant aerobiome species with taxon tables, to facilitate future environmental studies, is presented.
url
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-025-02303-7View
Published (Version of record) Open

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