AI Article Synopsis

  • - Ecosystem functionality relies on population interactions, and understanding these social behaviors in mixed populations is challenging due to costs and limitations of tagging methods; thus, alternative, cost-effective strategies are necessary.
  • - The researchers developed a web tool (BSocial) to analyze social behaviors by monitoring optical density (OD) and determining the effects of specific bacterial strains on the productivity of microbial communities through a combinatorial testing approach.
  • - The tool was validated in a study involving seven bacterial strains for MTBE bioremediation, demonstrating that combinations with positive and neutral social interactions produced better functional outcomes than simply selecting the strains with the highest individual fitness.

Article Abstract

Ecosystem functionality depends on interactions among populations, of the same or different taxa, and these are not just the sum of pairwise interactions. Thus, know-how of the social interactions occurring in mixed-populations are of high interest, however they are commonly unknown due to the limitations posed in tagging each population. The limitations include costs/time in tediously fluorescent tagging, and the number of different fluorescent tags. Tag-free strategies exist, such as high-throughput sequencing, but ultimately both strategies require the use of expensive machinery. Our work appoints social behaviors on individual strains in mixed-populations, offering a web-tool ( http://m4m.ugr.es/BSocial.html) for analyzing the community framework. Our quick and cheap approach includes the periodic monitoring of optical density (OD) from a full combinatorial testing of individual strains, where number of generations and growth rate are determined. The BSocial analyses then enable us to determine how the addition/absence of a particular species affects the net productivity of a microbial community and use this to select productive combinations, i.e., designate their social effect on a general community. Positive, neutral, or negative assignations are applied to describe the social behavior within the community by comparing fitness effects of the community against the individual strain. The usefulness of this tool for selection of optimal inoculum in biofilm-based methyl -butyl ether (MTBE) bioremediation was demonstrated. The studied model uses seven bacterial strains with diverse MTBE degradation/growth capacities. Full combinatorial testing of seven individual strains (triplicate tests of 127 combinations) were implemented, along with MTBE degradation as the desired function. Sole observation of highest species fitness did not render the best functional outcome, and only when strains with positive and neutral social assignations were mixed ( EE6, sp. MS2 and SH7), was this obtained. Furthermore, the use of positive and neutral strains in all its combinations had a significant higher degradation mean (x1.75) than exclusive negative strain combinations. Thus, social microbial processes benefit bioremediation more than negative social microbial combinations. The BSocial webtool is a great contributor to the study of social interactions in bioremediation processes, and may be used in other natural or synthetic habitat studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5442188PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.00919DOI Listing

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