Title: Aerobiology
1Aerobiology
- Microbiology of the Atmosphere
2Aerobiology
- The interdisciplinary science that deals with the
movement and dispersal of bioaerosols - The movement of bioaerosols is generally passive
and is greatly influenced by the environment - The survival of viable bioaerosols is also
dependent on the environmental conditions
3Bioaerosols
- Biological agents carried in the air as large
molecules, volatile compounds, single particles,
or clusters of particles that are living or were
released from a living organism - Particles sizes - 0.5?m to 100 ?m
- Capable of eliciting diseases that may be
infectious, allergic, or toxigenic with the
conditions being acute or chronic
4Bioaerosols in Our Environment
- Outdoor Sources
- Fungal Spores
- Pollen
- Bacteria
- Indoor Sources
- Viruses
- Bacteria
- Fungal Spores
- Dust mites
- Cockroaches
- Animal Dander - especially cats
5Outdoor Aerobiology
- Atmosphere
- Transport
- Fungal Spores
- Pollen
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9Spores, Pollen and Gravity
- In still air spores (and pollen) fall to the
ground at a rate (based on Stokes law) that is
proportional to the square of its radius - i.e. the bigger the spore the faster it will
fall - Aerodynamics also influenced by
- non-spherical shape or irregular shape
- ornamentation and aggregation
- these increase drag and delay deposition
10Stokes Law
2 s - r
V
gr2
9 m
V terminal velocity in cm/s s density of
sphere r density of air g acceleration due to
gravity m viscosity of air )1.8 x 10-4
g/cm/sec r radius of sphere
110.5 - 14.0
12Settling rates of particles
13Airborne Transport
14The Aerobiological Pathway
Dispersal
Deposition
Take-off
Effects of environmental factors
Source
Impact
15Airborne Transport
- Perfectly still air seldom occurs
- Prevailing air currents delay deposition by
gravity - Air flow is complex allowing bioaerosols to be
transported over short ranges to global distances - Transport occurs in the turbulent layer of the
atmosphere
16Turbulent Layer of Atmosphere
- Air movement shifting and unpredictable
- Depends on wind speed, direction, temperature,
and local eddies caused by roughness of the
terrain - Fungal spores are a normal component of the
turbulent layer possibly up to 200,000 spores/m3
of air however, pollen levels normally two
orders of magnitude lower
17Long distance transport
- Well documented in palynology literature as well
as in aerobiology literature - Typically these are reports of one time
incursions of exotic pollen types or preseason
pollen - Exotic pollen in sediments in Canada
- Preseason birch pollen in Scandinavian countries
from southern areas in Europe
18Well studied examples of long distance transport
- Wheat rust spores Starting in the 1920s the
movement of Puccinia graminis spores has been
demonstrated - Tobacco blue mold Since late 1980s, the
movement of Peronospora tabaccina spores has been
followed - Mountain cedar pollen My lab has been following
the LDT since 1980 - African dust and associated microorganisms have
been studied over past decade
19Juniperus ashei pollen
- Juniperus ashei (mountain cedar) has a limited
distribution - Arbuckle Mountains of Oklahoma
- Edwards Plateau of Texas
- Scattered areas of Ozarks
- Highly allergenic (cedar fever in Texas)
- Tulsa allergist reported 15 patient sensitivity
- Mid-winter pollination (Dec. and Jan.)
- Tulsa pollen season Feb through early Nov
- Evidence of pollen in Tulsa atmosphere
- Cedar pollen detected since 1980
20Distribution of Juniperus ashei
Juniperus ashei grows amongst the dissected
slopes of Cretaceous limestone of the Edwards
Plateau. The species co-occurs with J.
virginiana to the east and J. pinchotii other
Juniperus spp. to the west.
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22Incursion of J. ashei pollen into Tulsa
- Each winter since 1980 J. ashei pollen has been
registered by our Tulsa air samplers - Pollen recorded on 20 to 60 of the days in Dec
and Jan - Concentrations typically low however very high
concentrations have been registered on several
occasions (based on NAB level of very high gt1500
pollen grains/m3)
23Mountain Cedar Forecasting
- Started in Dec 1998
- Daily forecasts in Dec and Jan
- Forecasts posted on internet at
http//pollen.utulsa.edu - During past 6 season 812 forecasts issued
- Three sites in Texas Austin, Junction, San
Angelo - One site in Oklahoma Arbuckle Mountains
- One site in Arkansas Ozark Mountains (5 yrs)
24Forecast Components
- Release forecast based on meteorological
conditions and phenology of the plant - Temperatures above 45o F
- R.H. below 50
- Sunshine
- No rain in previous 24 hours
- Pollen cone maturity
- Downwind forecast based on model projections
using - HY-SPLIT model trajectories
- Meteorological conditions along the path
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271998-2004 Tulsa Cedar Profile
- During Dec and Jan of the 6 years cedar pollen
present on 233 days - Most days low levels
- Over 50 days moderate to very high levels
- 12 days with high levels
- One day had very high level (2,109 pollen/m3)
- Trajectories crossed Tulsa gt150 times with the
majority of trajectories from the Arbuckle Mts.
28London, Ontario
- Air sampling data from Jim Anderson from London,
Ontario - Juniperus pollen recorded 22 times in Dec and Jan
from 1998-2004 - Maximum was 58 pollen grains/m3
29Continental transport
- 27 Jan 99, Jim Anderson in London, Ontario
reported atmospheric Juniperus pollen - 58 pollen
grains/m3 - Trajectories show that the source of this pollen
was Texas population of Juniperus ashei - Our Jan 26 forecast indicated that the pollen
has the potential to travel very long distances.
30Fungal Bioaerosols
31THE FUNGI
Kingdom Protista
Div Myxomycota Div Oomycota
Kingdom Eumycota
Div Chytridiomycota Div
Zygomycota Div
Ascomycota Div
Basidiomycota
Asexual Fungi
32 FUNGAL SPORES
- Majority of spore types adapted for airborne
dispersal - Spores unicellular to multicellular from 1 to 100
?m - Main sources in the environment
- Leaf surfaces (phylloplane fungi)
- Soil
33Spore Release Mechanisms
- Passive
- Wind - generally the most abundant airborne
spores in the atmosphere - include members of the
Dry Air Spora which peak in afternoon - Rain - rain splash as well as tap and puff
- Active
- Generally require moisture
- Common mechanism for ascospores and basidiospores
34Wind Dispersed Spores
- Frequently related to wind speed and turbulence
- Typically borne on erect conidiophores or
sporangiophores that elevate spores above the
substrate - Dry Air Spora Cladosporium, Alternaria,
Epicoccum, Drechslera, Pithomyces, Curvularia,
smut spores
35Dry Air Spora
36Diurnal Rhythm of Cladosporium
37Cladosporium spores peak hourly concentration of
gt120,000 spores/m3 during a spore plume
38Cladosporium
- Common fungal genus occurring both indoors and
outdoors - Most abundant outdoor spore type with a worldwide
distribution - Normally exists as a saprobe or weak plant
pathogen - Spores are known to be allergenic
39Cladosporium spp.
40Passive Discharge during Rain
- Vibration and shaking as raindrops hit leaf
- May explain increases in Cladosporium during
rainfall - Release of basidiospores by puffballs shows
similar puffing when raindrop strikes mature
fruiting body
41Rain Splash
- Generally spores surrounded by mucilage
- Mucilage protects from desiccation but also
prevent dispersal by wind - First raindrops dissolve mucilage
- Resulting spore suspension dispersed by
subsequent raindrops - Spores commonly thin, colorless, elongate
42Active Discharge - Ascospores
- Hygroscopic material within ascus absorbs
moisture - Ascus swells and develops high osmotic pressure
- Pressure causes ascus to burst, explosively
shooting spores into the atmosphere - Need for rainfall will often override diurnal
rhythm of release
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44- Basidiospore discharge from basidium
- Moisture condense around crystal of manitol
- Bullers drop enlarges
- Fuses with a film of water around spore
- Shifts center of gravity
- Result of discharge
- Spores shot only a fraction of a millimeter
- Spores freed from gill or pore and able to fall
free and reach turbulent layer
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46Basidiospore Rhythm
- Need for moisture confines spore release to
periods of high humidity - Typically peak levels in pre-dawn hours and low
levels in afternoon
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48Airborne Fungal Spore Concentrations in Tulsa
2002
2002
49 23 Taxa identified Cladosporium, Ascospores,
Basidiospores, and Alternaria Comprised 90 of
Total
50Indoor Aerobiology
- Outdoor spores enter readily
- Many fungi can also amplify indoors anytime
moisture is available fungi can grow on many
indoor substrates - Penicillium, Aspergillus, and Cladosporium are
most common indoors - Many can form mycotoxins Aspergillus spp and
Stachybotrys
51Environmental factors that influence indoor
fungal contamination
- Outdoor concentration and type
- Type and rate of ventilation
- Activity levels
- Indoor moisture levels
- Modern building materials
52Typical Yearly Spore Levels 1998
53Spore plumes show the influence of environmental
conditions
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55Water Leak
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57Humidity
- Indoor relative humidity
- Below 30 R.H. no mold growth
- Above 70 optimal for mold
- Usually mold growth can occur above 50
- Humid air condenses on cool surfaces
- Cold windows in winter - molding and sills become
wet and suitable for fungal growth - Cold floors in winter
- Cooling coils in AC units in summer
- Humid air allows hygroscopic materials to absorb
water
58High humidity in home where subslab ducts failed
59Moisture Problems
- Become worse in past 20 - 30 yrs
- increased use of washing machines, dishwashers
- vaporizers and humidifiers actively spray
droplets into the air (often contaminated) - tighter buildings for energy conservation trap
moisture - Anytime moisture available fungi will grow
60Cladosporium one of the most common indoor fungi
growing on a diffuser
61Penicillium
- One of the most common soil fungi in natural
environment - Over 250 species
- Well known allergen
- Some species produce mycotoxins
- Some species produce antibiotics
- Produce VOCs
62Penicillium in culture
63Aspergillus
- Also common soil fungi
- Cause rot of stored grain
- Over 150 species
- Well known allergens
- Several species form mycotoxins
- Some species can grow at high temperatures
- Several species cause infections in lung,
sinuses, and hypersensitivity pneumonitis
64Aspergillus niger
65Aspergillus fumigatus
66Penicillium and Aspergillus
- Small spores passively aerosolized when spore
clusters disturbed - Spores extremely buoyant, remain airborne for
extended time - Penicillium and Aspergillus spores look alike
distinguished in culture
67Stachybotrys chartarum
- Soil fungus in nature
- Commonly found indoors on wet materials
containing cellulose, such as wallboard, jute,
wicker, straw baskets, and paper materials - Spores in slimy mass
- Thought to be allergenic although little is known
- May produce potent mycotoxins
68Indoor air sample
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71Air Sampling Techniques
72Principal Collection Methods
- Gravity
- Impaction
- Impingement
- Filtration
73Gravity
- Simplest but least accurate method of collecting
airborne biological samples - Coated microscope slide or open petri dish
containing agar exposed to atmosphere - Non quantitative for atmospheric concentrations
- Affected by particle size and shape and air
movement - Biased deposition of large particles
74IMPACTION SAMPLERS
- Separate particles from the air stream by using
inertia of particles - Forces deposition onto a solid or agar surface
- Most commonly used method
- Instruments available for culturable sampling and
total spore sampling
75Impaction SamplersTotal Spore Samplers
- Outdoor Samplers
- Hirst Spore Trap Burkard and others
- Rotorod Sampler
- Samplair MK-3 Sampler
- Indoor Samplers
- Burkard Continuous Recording Air Sampler
- Samplair MK-3 Sampler
- Burkard Personal Volumetric Sampler
- Air-O-Cell Sampler
- Cyclex-D Sampler
76Burkard Spore Trap
77Advantages of Burkard Spore Trap
- High efficiency down to less than 5 mm
- Allows for accuracy for small fungal spores such
as basidiospores and small ascospores - Time discrimination
- Permits analysis for diurnal rhythms
- Permanent slides for future reference
78Burkard 7-day sampler head
- Standard is the 7-day sampling head
- Sampler drum mounted on 7-day clock
- Drum moves by orifice at 2 mm per hr
- Melenex tape mounted on drum and greased
(Lubriseal, High Vacuum Grease, other) - Air is brought in at 10 l/min and impacts on
greased Melenex tape - Drum changed each week
79Seven Day Sampling Head
80Processing the 7-day drum
- Melenex tape removed from drum
- Tape cut into seven 24 hour segments each 48 mm
long - Segments mounted on microscope slides in 10
gelvatol (polyvinyl alcohol) and dried - Glycerin-jelly mounting medium added and a 50 mm
cover slip - Mounting medium contains pollen stain - either
basic fuchsin or phenosafarin
81Melenex tape on cutting board
8224 hour sampling head
83Outdoor Air Sample from Burkard Spore Trap
84Rotorod Samplers
85Rotorod Samplers
- Models most often used have retracting rods for
intermittent operation (10 sampling time
typical) - Head rotates at 2400 rpm
- Leading edge of rod coated with grease
- Pollen and spores impacted on greased surface
- Efficient for pollen and spores gt10 mm
86Rotorod Sampler
Rods spin at 2400 rpm. Particles (spores and
pollen) are impacted on leading face of the rod
which is greased. Efficiency decreases
dramatically below 10 mm. Intermittent head spins
10 of time.
87Allergenco Samplair
88Continuous Recording Burkard
24 hour sampling onto a coated microscope slide
89Burkard Personal Sampler
90Air-O-Cell Sampler
91Air-O-Cell Slide
92Cyclex-d
93Andersen (N-6) Single Stage Sampler
94Andersen 6-Stage and 2-Stage Impactors
95Biocassette Sampler
96Burkard Portable Air Sampler for Agar Plates
97Inpingement Samplers
- Separate particles from the air stream by using
inertia of particles - Forces deposition into liquid collection medium
(usually a dilute buffer) - Aggregates of cells can be broken apart
- Allows for several possible analytic
applications culture, microscopy, biochemistry,
immunoassays, PCR
98Impingers
Burkard Multi-stage
BioSampler
AGI-30
99Filtration
- Separates particles from airstream by passage
through a porous substrate, usually a membrane
filter - Collection depends on filter pore size and flow
rate - Loss of viability may occur due to desiccation
- Adaptable for a variety of assays
100Sampler Performance
- Collection efficiency is the ability to capture
the particles onto the collection medium - Physical characteristics of the inlet and the
airflow rate used to calculate d50 - Particle diameter at which 50 of particles are
collected - Because of sharp cut-off it is generally accepted
that all particles above this size are collected
101d50 values for some samplers (CUT SIZE)
Buttner MP, Willeke K, Grinshpun SA. Sampling and
Analysis of Airborne Microorganisms. In Manual
of Environmental Microbiology 2nd ed. ASM Press,
Washington, 2002.
102Analytic Methods
- Microscopy
- Culture
- Biochemistry
- Molecular Biology
103Microscopy
- Identification of total spores (both culturable
and non-culturable) along with pollen and other
particulates - Identification to species level usually not
possible - Identification of morphologically similar spores
not possible
104Culture
- Only viable bacteria and fungi
- Limited to those taxa able to grow in culture on
medium used - Success based on medium and incubation time and
temperature - Permits speciation when required
- Results expressed as CFU/m3
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106Biochemistry
- Detection of specific compounds
- May not be specific for a genus or species
- Assay examples
- Ergosterol
- B 1,3-glucan
- Endotoxins
- Mycotoxins Stachybotrys toxins and ochratoxin
- Various types of assays such as HPLC
107Immunochemistry
- Specific allergen molecules
- Not useful for routine air sampling
- Typically used for filter samples and impinger
samples but have been used for spore trap samples - Requires prior development of an antibody
- Widely used for dust mite, cockroach, cat, etc.
- Few fungal assays available
108Molecular Biology
- Detection of specific genetic elements
- Highly specific and sensitive
- Currently restricted to a few organisms