Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Microbial communities in the liver and brain are informative for postmortem submersion interval estimation in the late phase of decomposition: A study in mouse cadavers recovered from freshwater

Journal Article · · Frontiers in Microbiology
Introduction

Bodies recovered from water, especially in the late phase of decomposition, pose difficulties to the investigating authorities. Various methods have been proposed for postmortem submersion interval (PMSI) estimation and drowning identification, but some limitations remain. Many recent studies have proved the value of microbiota succession in viscera for postmortem interval estimation. Nevertheless, the visceral microbiota succession and its application for PMSI estimation and drowning identification require further investigation.

Methods

In the current study, mouse drowning and CO 2 asphyxia models were developed, and cadavers were immersed in freshwater for 0 to 14 days. Microbial communities in the liver and brain were characterized via 16S rDNA high-throughput sequencing.

Results

Only livers and brains collected from 5 to 14 days postmortem were qualified for sequencing. There was significant variation between microbiota from liver and brain. Differences in microbiota between the cadavers of mice that had drowned and those only subjected to postmortem submersion decreased over the PMSI. Significant successions in microbial communities were observed among the different subgroups within the late phase of the PMSI in livers and brains. Eighteen taxa in the liver which were mainly related to Clostridium_sensu_stricto and Aeromonas , and 26 taxa in the brain which were mainly belonged to Clostridium_sensu_stricto , Acetobacteroides , and Limnochorda , were selected as potential biomarkers for PMSI estimation based on a random forest algorithm. The PMSI estimation models established yielded accurate prediction results with mean absolute errors ± the standard error of 1.282 ± 0.189 d for the liver and 0.989 ± 0.237 d for the brain.

Conclusions

The present study provides novel information on visceral postmortem microbiota succession in corpses submerged in freshwater which sheds new light on PMSI estimation based on the liver and brain in forensic practice.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Electricity (OE), Advanced Grid Research & Development. Power Systems Engineering Research
OSTI ID:
1898442
Journal Information:
Frontiers in Microbiology, Journal Name: Frontiers in Microbiology Vol. 13; ISSN 1664-302X
Publisher:
Frontiers Media SACopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
Switzerland
Language:
English

References (48)

Analysis of Postmortem Intestinal Microbiota Successional Patterns with Application in Postmortem Interval Estimation journal November 2021
Microbial forensics: new breakthroughs and future prospects journal October 2018
Initial insights into bacterial succession during human decomposition journal November 2014
A novel approach for the forensic diagnosis of drowning by microbiological analysis with next-generation sequencing and unweighted UniFrac-based PCoA journal July 2020
Macromorphological findings in cases of death in water: a critical view on “drowning signs” journal November 2020
A preliminary study on early postmortem submersion interval (PMSI) estimation and cause-of-death discrimination based on nontargeted metabolomics and machine learning algorithms journal January 2022
Marine bacteria comprise a possible indicator of drowning in seawater journal April 2008
Marine bacterial succession as a potential indicator of postmortem submersion interval journal June 2011
Detection of marine and freshwater bacterioplankton in immersed victims: Post-mortem bacterial invasion does not readily occur journal September 2011
Selective culturing and genus-specific PCR detection for identification of Aeromonas in tissue samples to assist the medico-legal diagnosis of death by drowning journal September 2012
A new molecular approach to help conclude drowning as a cause of death: Simultaneous detection of eight bacterioplankton species using real-time PCR assays with TaqMan probes journal October 2012
Postmortem submersion interval in human bodies recovered from fresh water in an area of Mediterranean climate. Application and comparison of preexisting models journal January 2020
Postmortem submersion interval (PMSI) estimation from the microbiome of Sus scrofa bone in a freshwater river journal January 2021
Prediction of minimum postmortem submersion interval (PMSImin) based on eukaryotic community succession on skeletal remains recovered from a lentic environment journal June 2021
A novel method for the diagnosis of drowning by detection of Aeromonas sobria with PCR method journal November 2009
The genus Aeromonas: A general approach journal May 2019
Distinctive thanatomicrobiome signatures found in the blood and internal organs of humans journal November 2014
Microbiome Tools for Forensic Science journal September 2017
QIIME allows analysis of high-throughput community sequencing data journal April 2010
A cold shock protein promotes high-temperature microbial growth through binding to diverse RNA species journal March 2021
FEAST: fast expectation-maximization for microbial source tracking journal June 2019
Potential use of molecular and structural characterization of the gut bacterial community for postmortem interval estimation in Sprague Dawley rats journal January 2021
Human Thanatomicrobiome Succession and Time Since Death journal July 2016
Search and clustering orders of magnitude faster than BLAST journal August 2010
Multi-kernel linear mixed model with adaptive lasso for prediction analysis on high-dimensional multi-omics data journal November 2019
Ribosomal Database Project: data and tools for high throughput rRNA analysis journal November 2013
Limnochorda pilosa gen. nov., sp. nov., a moderately thermophilic, facultatively anaerobic, pleomorphic bacterium and proposal of Limnochordaceae fam. nov., Limnochordales ord. nov. and Limnochordia classis nov. in the phylum Firmicutes journal August 2015
Comparison of Protocols for Measuring and Calculating Postmortem Submersion Intervals for Human Analogs in Fresh Water journal December 2012
Evaluation of Postmortem Bacterial Migration Using Culturing and Real-Time Quantitative PCR journal March 2013
Postmortem submersion interval (PMSI) estimation from the microbiome of sus scrofa bone in a freshwater lake journal April 2021
Microbial community succession on submerged vertebrate carcasses in a tidal river habitat: Implications for aquatic forensic investigations journal August 2021
Microbial community succession of submerged bones in an aquatic habitat journal March 2022
Predicting the Postmortem Submersion Interval for Human Remains Recovered from U.K. Waterways journal March 2010
Supervised classification of human microbiota journal March 2011
Microbial community assembly and metabolic function during mammalian corpse decomposition journal December 2015
Acinetobacter spp. as nosocomial pathogens: microbiological, clinical, and epidemiological features. journal April 1996
A Roadmap for Bridging Basic and Applied Research in Forensic Entomology journal January 2011
IMPARO: inferring microbial interactions through parameter optimisation journal August 2020
Falco: high-speed FastQC emulation for quality control of sequencing data journal January 2019
Transcriptomics Reveal Several Gene Expression Patterns in the Piezophile Desulfovibrio hydrothermalis in Response to Hydrostatic Pressure journal September 2014
Machine learning performance in a microbial molecular autopsy context: A cross-sectional postmortem human population study journal April 2019
Thanatomicrobiome – State Of The Art And Future Directions journal January 2021
Cadaver Thanatomicrobiome Signatures: The Ubiquitous Nature of Clostridium Species in Human Decomposition journal October 2017
Postmortem submersion interval estimation of cadavers recovered from freshwater based on gut microbial community succession journal December 2022
Microbial Biofilm Community Variation in Flowing Habitats: Potential Utility as Bioindicators of Postmortem Submersion Intervals journal January 2016
Skin Microbiome Analysis for Forensic Human Identification: What Do We Know So Far? journal June 2020
Global Dieting Trends and Seasonality: Social Big-Data Analysis May Be a Useful Tool journal March 2021
A microbial clock provides an accurate estimate of the postmortem interval in a mouse model system journal October 2013

Similar Records

Flaxseed oil ameliorates aging in d ‐galactose induced rats via altering gut microbiota and mitigating oxidative damage
Journal Article · Wed Jun 01 20:00:00 EDT 2022 · Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture · OSTI ID:1870950

Salivary microbiomes of indigenous Tsimane mothers and infants are distinct despite frequent premastication
Journal Article · Wed Nov 02 20:00:00 EDT 2016 · PeerJ · OSTI ID:1330900

Subacute safety assessment of recombinant Lactococcus lactis on the gut microbiota of male Sprague–Dawley rats
Journal Article · Thu Apr 08 20:00:00 EDT 2021 · Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture · OSTI ID:1775556

Related Subjects