Bacteria, molds, and toxins in water-damaged building materials

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Abstract

Microbial toxins and eukaryotic cell toxicity from indoor building materials heavily colonized by fungi and bacteria were analyzed. The dominant colonizers at water-damaged sites of the building were Stachybotrys chartarum (103 to 105 visible conidia cm-2), Penicillium and Aspergillus species (104 CFU mg-1), gram-negative bacteria (104 CFU mg-1), and mycobacteria (103 CFU mg-1). The mycobaeterial isolates were most similar to M. komossense, with 98% similarity of the complete 16S rDNA sequence. Limulus assay of water extracts prepared from a water-damaged gypsum liner revealed high contents of gram-negative endotoxin (17 ng mg-1 of E. coli lipopolysaccharide equivalents) and β-D-glucan (210 ng mg-1 of curdlan equivalents). High-performance liquid chromatography analysis of the methanol extracts showed that the water-damaged gypsum liner also contained satratoxin (17 ng mg-1). This methanol-extracted substance was 200 times more toxic to rabbit skin and fetus feline lung cells than extract of gypsum liner sampled from a non-water-damaged site. The same extract contained toxin(s) that paralyzed the motility of boar spermatozoa at extremely low concentrations; the 50% effective concentration was 0.3 μg of dry solids per ml. This toxicity was not explainable by the amount of bacterial endotoxin, β-D- glucan, or satratoxin present in the same extract. The novel in vitro toxicity test that utilized boar spermatozoa as described in this article is convenient to perform and reproducible and was a useful tool for detecting toxins of microbial origin toward eukaryotic cells not detectable in building materials by the other methods.

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Andersson, M. A., Nikulin, M., Köljalg, U., Andersson, M. C., Rainey, F., Reijula, K., … Salkinoja-Salonen, M. (1997). Bacteria, molds, and toxins in water-damaged building materials. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 63(2), 387–393. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.63.2.387-393.1997

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