Metabolic complexity drives divergence in microbial communities.

Nat Ecol Evol

Bioinformatics Program, Faculty of Computing and Data Science, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.

Published: August 2024

Microbial communities are shaped by environmental metabolites, but the principles that govern whether different communities will converge or diverge in any given condition remain unknown, posing fundamental questions about the feasibility of microbiome engineering. Here we studied the longitudinal assembly dynamics of a set of natural microbial communities grown in laboratory conditions of increasing metabolic complexity. We found that different microbial communities tend to become similar to each other when grown in metabolically simple conditions, but they diverge in composition as the metabolic complexity of the environment increases, a phenomenon we refer to as the divergence-complexity effect. A comparative analysis of these communities revealed that this divergence is driven by community diversity and by the assortment of specialist taxa capable of degrading complex metabolites. An ecological model of community dynamics indicates that the hierarchical structure of metabolism itself, where complex molecules are enzymatically degraded into progressively simpler ones that then participate in cross-feeding between community members, is necessary and sufficient to recapitulate our experimental observations. In addition to helping understand the role of the environment in community assembly, the divergence-complexity effect can provide insight into which environments support multiple community states, enabling the search for desired ecosystem functions towards microbiome engineering applications.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41559-024-02440-6DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

microbial communities
16
metabolic complexity
12
microbiome engineering
8
communities
6
community
5
complexity drives
4
drives divergence
4
microbial
4
divergence microbial
4
communities microbial
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!