TY - JOUR
T1 - Fomite Transmission Follows Invasion Ecology Principles
AU - Wang, Peihua
AU - Tong, Xinzhao
AU - Zhang, Nan
AU - Miao, Te
AU - Chan, Jack P.T.
AU - Huang, Hong
AU - Lee, Patrick K.H.
AU - Li, Yuguo
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by the HK Research Grants Council Collaborative Research Fund (grant number C7025-16G) and the University of Hong Kong-Zhejiang Institute of Research and Innovation Seed Funding Scheme (grant number 04004). We thank Pengcheng Zhao at the University of Hong Kong for the constructive criticism of the manuscript. We declare no competing interests.
Funding Information:
This study was supported by the HK Research Grants Council Collaborative Research Fund (grant number C7025-16G) and the University of Hong Kong-Zhejiang Institute of Research and Innovation Seed Funding Scheme (grant number 04004). We thank Pengcheng Zhao at the University of Hong Kong for the constructive criticism of the manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Wang et al.
PY - 2022/5/3
Y1 - 2022/5/3
N2 - The invasion ecology principles illustrated in many ecosystems have not yet been explored in the context of fomite transmission. We hypothesized that invaders in fomite transmission are trackable, are neutrally distributed between hands and environmental surfaces, and exhibit a proximity effect. To test this hypothesis, a surrogate invader, Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus, was spread by a root carrier in an office housing more than 20 participants undertaking normal activities, and the microbiotas on skin and environmental surfaces were analyzed before and after invasion. First, we found that the invader was trackable. Its identity and emission source could be determined using microbial-interaction networks, and the root carrier could be identified using a rank analysis. Without prior information, L. bulgaricus could be identified as the invader emitted from a source that exclusively contained the invader, and the probable root carrier could be located. In addition to the single-taxon invasion by L. bulgaricus, multiple-taxon invasion was observed, as genera from sputum/saliva exhibited co-occurrence relationships on skin and environmental surfaces. Second, the invader had a below-neutral distribution in a neutral community model, suggesting that hands accrued heavier invader contamination than environmental surfaces. Third, a proximity effect was observed on a surface touch network. Invader contamination on surfaces decreased with increasing geodesic distance from the hands of the carrier, indicating that the carrier’s touching behaviors were the main driver of fomite transmission. Taken together, these results demonstrate the invasion ecology principles in fomite transmission and provide a general basis for the management of ecological fomite transmission.
AB - The invasion ecology principles illustrated in many ecosystems have not yet been explored in the context of fomite transmission. We hypothesized that invaders in fomite transmission are trackable, are neutrally distributed between hands and environmental surfaces, and exhibit a proximity effect. To test this hypothesis, a surrogate invader, Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus, was spread by a root carrier in an office housing more than 20 participants undertaking normal activities, and the microbiotas on skin and environmental surfaces were analyzed before and after invasion. First, we found that the invader was trackable. Its identity and emission source could be determined using microbial-interaction networks, and the root carrier could be identified using a rank analysis. Without prior information, L. bulgaricus could be identified as the invader emitted from a source that exclusively contained the invader, and the probable root carrier could be located. In addition to the single-taxon invasion by L. bulgaricus, multiple-taxon invasion was observed, as genera from sputum/saliva exhibited co-occurrence relationships on skin and environmental surfaces. Second, the invader had a below-neutral distribution in a neutral community model, suggesting that hands accrued heavier invader contamination than environmental surfaces. Third, a proximity effect was observed on a surface touch network. Invader contamination on surfaces decreased with increasing geodesic distance from the hands of the carrier, indicating that the carrier’s touching behaviors were the main driver of fomite transmission. Taken together, these results demonstrate the invasion ecology principles in fomite transmission and provide a general basis for the management of ecological fomite transmission.
KW - built environment
KW - disease transmission
KW - invasive species
KW - microbial interaction
KW - surface ecosystem
KW - surface hygiene
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85133287787&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1128/msystems.00211-22
DO - 10.1128/msystems.00211-22
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85133287787
SN - 2379-5077
VL - 7
JO - mSystems
JF - mSystems
IS - 3
ER -