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Dive into the research topics where Ashley Bateman is active.

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Featured researches published by Ashley Bateman.


PeerJ | 2015

Humans differ in their personal microbial cloud

James F. Meadow; Adam E. Altrichter; Ashley Bateman; Jason Stenson; G. Z. Brown; Jessica L. Green; Brendan J. M. Bohannan

Dispersal of microbes between humans and the built environment can occur through direct contact with surfaces or through airborne release; the latter mechanism remains poorly understood. Humans emit upwards of 106 biological particles per hour, and have long been known to transmit pathogens to other individuals and to indoor surfaces. However it has not previously been demonstrated that humans emit a detectible microbial cloud into surrounding indoor air, nor whether such clouds are sufficiently differentiated to allow the identification of individual occupants. We used high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA genes to characterize the airborne bacterial contribution of a single person sitting in a sanitized custom experimental climate chamber. We compared that to air sampled in an adjacent, identical, unoccupied chamber, as well as to supply and exhaust air sources. Additionally, we assessed microbial communities in settled particles surrounding each occupant, to investigate the potential long-term fate of airborne microbial emissions. Most occupants could be clearly detected by their airborne bacterial emissions, as well as their contribution to settled particles, within 1.5–4 h. Bacterial clouds from the occupants were statistically distinct, allowing the identification of some individual occupants. Our results confirm that an occupied space is microbially distinct from an unoccupied one, and demonstrate for the first time that individuals release their own personalized microbial cloud.


Mbio | 2015

Microbiota of the indoor environment: a meta-analysis

Rachel I. Adams; Ashley Bateman; Holly M. Bik; James F. Meadow

BackgroundAs modern humans, we spend the majority of our time in indoor environments. Consequently, environmental exposure to microorganisms has important implications for human health, and a better understanding of the ecological drivers and processes that impact indoor microbial assemblages will be key for expanding our knowledge of the built environment. In the present investigation, we combined recent studies examining the microbiota of the built environment in order to identify unifying community patterns and the relative importance of indoor environmental factors. Ultimately, the present meta-analysis focused on studies of bacteria and archaea due to the limited number of high-throughput fungal studies from the indoor environment. We combined 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene datasets from 16 surveys of indoor environments conducted worldwide, additionally including 7 other studies representing putative environmental sources of microbial taxa (outdoor air, soil, and the human body).ResultsCombined analysis of subsets of studies that shared specific experimental protocols or indoor habitats revealed community patterns indicative of consistent source environments and environmental filtering. Additionally, we were able to identify several consistent sources for indoor microorganisms, particularly outdoor air and skin, mirroring what has been shown in individual studies. Technical variation across studies had a strong effect on comparisons of microbial community assemblages, with differences in experimental protocols limiting our ability to extensively explore the importance of, for example, sampling locality, building function and use, or environmental substrate in structuring indoor microbial communities.ConclusionsWe present a snapshot of an important scientific field in its early stages, where studies have tended to focus on heavy sampling in a few geographic areas. From the practical perspective, this endeavor reinforces the importance of negative “kit” controls in microbiome studies. From the perspective of understanding mechanistic processes in the built environment, this meta-analysis confirms that broad factors, such as geography and building type, structure indoor microbes. However, this exercise suggests that individual studies with common sampling techniques may be more appropriate to explore the relative importance of subtle indoor environmental factors on the indoor microbiome.


PeerJ | 2013

Significant changes in the skin microbiome mediated by the sport of roller derby

James F. Meadow; Ashley Bateman; Keith M. Herkert; Timothy K. O’Connor; Jessica L. Green

Diverse bacterial communities live on and in human skin. These complex communities vary by skin location on the body, over time, between individuals, and between geographic regions. Culture-based studies have shown that human to human and human to surface contact mediates the dispersal of pathogens, yet little is currently known about the drivers of bacterial community assembly patterns on human skin. We hypothesized that participation in a sport involving skin to skin contact would result in detectable shifts in skin bacterial community composition. We conducted a study during a flat track roller derby tournament, and found that teammates shared distinct skin microbial communities before and after playing against another team, but that opposing teams’ bacterial communities converged during the course of a roller derby bout. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that the human skin microbiome shifts in composition during activities involving human to human contact, and that contact sports provide an ideal setting in which to evaluate dispersal of microorganisms between people.


Molecular Ecology | 2016

Climate structures genetic variation across a species' elevation range: a test of range limits hypotheses

Jason P. Sexton; Matthew B. Hufford; Ashley Bateman; David B. Lowry; Harald Meimberg; Sharon Y. Strauss; Kevin J. Rice

Gene flow may influence the formation of species range limits, and yet little is known about the patterns of gene flow with respect to environmental gradients or proximity to range limits. With rapid environmental change, it is especially important to understand patterns of gene flow to inform conservation efforts. Here we investigate the species range of the selfing, annual plant, Mimulus laciniatus, in the California Sierra Nevada. We assessed genetic variation, gene flow, and population abundance across the entire elevation‐based climate range. Contrary to expectations, within‐population plant density increased towards both climate limits. Mean genetic diversity of edge populations was equivalent to central populations; however, all edge populations exhibited less genetic diversity than neighbouring interior populations. Genetic differentiation was fairly consistent and moderate among all populations, and no directional signals of contemporary gene flow were detected between central and peripheral elevations. Elevation‐driven gene flow (isolation by environment), but not isolation by distance, was found across the species range. These findings were the same towards high‐ and low‐elevation range limits and were inconsistent with two common centre‐edge hypotheses invoked for the formation of species range limits: (i) decreasing habitat quality and population size; (ii) swamping gene flow from large, central populations. This pattern demonstrates that climate, but not centre‐edge dynamics, is an important range‐wide factor structuring M. laciniatus populations. To our knowledge, this is the first empirical study to relate environmental patterns of gene flow to range limits hypotheses. Similar investigations across a wide variety of taxa and life histories are needed.


Mbio | 2017

Cleanliness in context: reconciling hygiene with a modern microbial perspective

Roo Vandegrift; Ashley Bateman; Kyla N. Siemens; May Nguyen; Hannah E. Wilson; Jessica L. Green; Kevin Van Den Wymelenberg; Roxana J. Hickey

The concept of hygiene is rooted in the relationship between cleanliness and the maintenance of good health. Since the widespread acceptance of the germ theory of disease, hygiene has become increasingly conflated with sterilization. In reviewing studies across the hygiene literature (most often hand hygiene), we found that nearly all studies of hand hygiene utilize bulk reduction in bacterial load as a proxy for reduced transmission of pathogenic organisms. This treatment of hygiene may be insufficient in light of recent microbial ecology research, which has demonstrated that humans have intimate and evolutionarily significant relationships with a diverse assemblage of microorganisms (our microbiota). The human skin is home to a diverse and specific community of microorganisms, which include members that exist across the ecological spectrum from pathogen through commensal to mutualist. Most evidence suggests that the skin microbiota is likely of direct benefit to the host and only rarely exhibits pathogenicity. This complex ecological context suggests that the conception of hygiene as a unilateral reduction or removal of microbes has outlived its usefulness. As such, we suggest the explicit definition of hygiene as “those actions and practices that reduce the spread or transmission of pathogenic microorganisms, and thus reduce the incidence of disease.”


Standards in Genomic Sciences | 2014

Meeting report for the 1st skin microbiota workshop, boulder, CO October 15-16 2012

Jack A. Gilbert; Madeleine Ball; Paul C. Blainey; Martin J. Blaser; Brendan J. M. Bohannan; Ashley Bateman; John Bunge; Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello; Slava S. Epstein; Noah Fierer; Dirk Gevers; Tracy C. Grikscheit; Leila J. Hamdan; James Harvey; Curtis Huttenhower; Benjamin C. Kirkup; Heidi H. Kong; Christian L. Lauber; Katherine P. Lemon; Susan V. Lynch; Lance Martin; Charlene Mello; Joseph Palma; Roy Parker; Joseph F. Petrosino; Julia A. Segre; Leslie B. Vosshall; Rui Yi; Rob Knight

This report details the outcome of the 1st Skin Microbiota Workshop, Boulder, CO, held on October 15th-16th 2012. The workshop was arranged to bring Department of Defense personnel together with experts in microbial ecology, human skin physiology and anatomy, and computational techniques for interrogating the microbiome to define research frontiers at the intersection of these important areas. The workshop outlined a series of questions and created several working groups to address those questions, specifically to promote interdisciplinary activity and potential future collaboration. The US Army provided generous grant support and the meeting was organized and hosted by the University of Colorado at Boulder. A primary forward vision of the meeting was the importance of understanding skin microbial communities to improve the health and stealth of US Army warfighters.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 2015

Evolution of the indoor biome

Laura J. Martin; Rachel I. Adams; Ashley Bateman; Holly M. Bik; John Hawks; Sarah M. Hird; David P. Hughes; Steven W. Kembel; Kerry A. Kinney; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Gabriel Levy; Craig R. McClain; James F. Meadow; Raul F. Medina; Gwynne Mhuireach; Corrie S. Moreau; Jason Munshi-South; Lauren M. Nichols; Clare Palmer; Laura Popova; Coby Schal; Martin Täubel; Michelle D. Trautwein; Juan A. Ugalde; Robert R. Dunn


Archive | 2016

Plant density data

Jason P. Sexton; Matthew B. Hufford; Ashley Bateman; David B. Lowry; Harald Meimberg; Sharon Y. Strauss; Kevin J. Rice


Archive | 2015

Evolution of the indoor biome NESCent Working Group on the Evolutionary Biology of the Built Environment

Laura J. Martin; Rachel I. Adams; Ashley Bateman; Holly M. Bik; John Hawks; Sarah M. Hird; David P. Hughes; Steven W. Kembel; Kerry A. Kinney; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Gabriel Levy; Craig R. McClain; James F. Meadow; Raul F. Medina; Gwynne Mhuireach; Corrie S. Moreau; Jason Munshi-South; Lauren M. Nichols; Clare Palmer; Laura Popova; Coby Schal; Michelle Trautwein; Juan A. Ugalde; Robert R. Dunn


Archive | 2014

Skin Microbiota Workshop: Multidisciplinary Perspectives, Challenges and Opportunities

Jack A. Gilbert; Madeleine Ball; Paul C. Blainey; Martin J. Blaser; Brendan J. M. Bohannan; Ashley Bateman; John Bunge; Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello; Slava E. Epstein; Noah Fierer; Dirk Gevers; Tracy C. Grikscheit; Leila J. Hamdan; James Harvey; Curtis Huttenhower; Benjamin C. Kirkup; Heidi H. Kong; Christian L. Lauber; Katherine P. Lemon; Susan V. Lynch

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Benjamin C. Kirkup

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Christian L. Lauber

University of Colorado Boulder

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Heidi H. Kong

National Institutes of Health

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Holly M. Bik

University of California

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