AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the interactions between two marine microorganisms, Prochlorococcus (a type of phototroph) and Alteromonas (a heterotroph), to understand how these relationships affect their growth and survival over time.
  • The research found that while the interactions did not significantly alter standard growth metrics of Prochlorococcus, they influenced the dynamics of population decline, suggesting stress resistance may increase in coexistence with Alteromonas.
  • Differentiating co-culture outcomes revealed that interactions can vary significantly between strains, influencing nutrient recycling and whether they compete or support each other's growth.

Article Abstract

Due to their potential impact on ecosystems and biogeochemistry, microbial interactions, such as those between phytoplankton and bacteria, have been studied intensively using specific model organisms. Yet, to what extent interactions differ between closely related organisms, or how these interactions change over time, or culture conditions, remains unclear. Here, we characterize the interactions between five strains each of two globally abundant marine microorganisms, Prochlorococcus (phototroph) and Alteromonas (heterotroph), from the first encounter between individual strains and over more than a year of repeated cycles of exponential growth and long-term nitrogen starvation. Prochlorococcus-Alteromonas interactions had little effect on traditional growth parameters such as Prochlorococcus growth rate, maximal fluorescence, or lag phase, affecting primarily the dynamics of culture decline, which we interpret as representing cell mortality and lysis. The shape of the Prochlorococcus decline curve and the carrying capacity of the co-cultures were determined by the phototroph and not the heterotroph strains involved. Comparing various mathematical models of culture mortality suggests that Prochlorococcus death rate increases over time in mono-cultures but decreases in co-cultures, with cells potentially becoming more resistant to stress. Our results demonstrate intra-species differences in ecologically relevant co-culture outcomes. These include the recycling efficiency of N and whether the interactions are mutually synergistic or competitive. They also highlight the information-rich growth and death curves as a useful readout of the interaction phenotype.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9860064PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41396-022-01330-8DOI Listing

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