Wassermann et al., 2020
jueves, 12 de noviembre de 2020
An Apple a Day: Which Bacteria Do We Eat With Organic and Conventional Apples?
Wassermann et al., 2020
Wassermann et al., 2020
Apples are among the most
consumed fruits world-wide. They represent a source of direct human
exposure to bacterial communities, which is less studied. We analyzed
the apple microbiome to detect differences between tissues and the
impact of organic and conventional management by a combined approach of
16S rRNA gene amplicon analysis and qPCR, and visualization using
fluorescence in situ hybridization and confocal laser scanning
microscopy (FISH-CLSM). Each apple fruit harbors different tissues
(stem, peel, fruit pulp, seeds, and calyx), which were colonized by
distinct bacterial communities. Interestingly, fruit pulp and seeds were
bacterial hot spots, while the peel was less colonized. In all,
approximately 108 16S rRNA bacterial gene copy numbers were
determined in each g apple. Abundances were not influenced by the
management practice but we found a strong reduction in bacterial
diversity and evenness in conventionally managed apples. In addition,
despite the similar structure in general dominated by Proteobacteria (80%), Bacteroidetes (9%), Actinobacteria (5%), and Firmicutes
(3%), significant shifts of almost 40% of bacterial genera and orders
were monitored. Among them, especially bacterial signatures known for
health-affecting potential were found to be enhanced in conventionally
managed apples. Our results suggest that we consume about 100 million
bacterial cells with one apple. Although this amount was the same, the
bacterial composition was significantly different in conventionally and
organically produced apples.
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