High-resolution Staphylococcus profiling reveals intra-species diversity in a single skin niche

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Abstract

The skin microbiome is dominated by a few key genera, among which Staphylococcus is one of the most well-characterised. Recent studies have examined the roles of various Staphylococcus species such as S. epidermidis and S. hominis within broader skin microbial communities. However, these investigations often rely on isolates from multiple individuals and hence, limiting their ability to capture intra-community interactions. In this study, we focused on the axillary microbiome of a single healthy individual to characterise the genetic and functional diversity of resident Staphylococcus isolates. Using a low-cost, high-throughput DNA extraction and long-read whole genome sequencing pipeline, we generated complete genomes for 93 isolates spanning seven genetically distinct lineages across three major skin species. These comprised of one dominant with three additional lineages of S. epidermidis , two of S. hominis and one of S. capitis . Functional and metabolic analyses revealed species- and strain-specific features, suggesting potential metabolic cross-feeding and specialisation within this community, including within strains of S. epidermidis . These findings highlight the metabolic complexity and potential interdependence of staphylococci inhabiting a single skin site and the need for strain-level resolution of the community. The strains form part of the York Skin Microbiome (YSM) collection, a growing open biobank of genetically diverse skin isolates from matched individuals.

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