Hansen Susse Kirkelund, Rainey Paul B, Haagensen Janus A J, Molin Søren
Infection Microbiology Group, BioCentrum-DTU, The Technical University of Denmark, Building 301, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
Nature. 2007 Feb 1;445(7127):533-6. doi: 10.1038/nature05514.
Biofilms are spatially structured communities of microbes whose function is dependent on a complex web of symbiotic interactions. Localized interactions within these assemblages are predicted to affect the coexistence of the component species, community structure and function, but there have been few explicit empirical analyses of the evolution of interactions. Here we show, with the use of a two-species community, that selection in a spatially structured environment leads to the evolution of an exploitative interaction. Simple mutations in the genome of one species caused it to adapt to the presence of the other, forming an intimate and specialized association. The derived community was more stable and more productive than the ancestral community. Our results show that evolution in a spatially structured environment can stabilize interactions between species, provoke marked changes in their symbiotic nature and affect community function.
生物膜是微生物的空间结构化群落,其功能依赖于复杂的共生相互作用网络。预计这些集合体内的局部相互作用会影响组成物种的共存、群落结构和功能,但对相互作用进化的明确实证分析却很少。在这里,我们通过使用一个两物种群落表明,在空间结构化环境中的选择会导致剥削性相互作用的进化。一个物种基因组中的简单突变使其适应另一个物种的存在,形成了一种紧密且特殊的关联。衍生出的群落比原始群落更稳定、生产力更高。我们的结果表明,在空间结构化环境中的进化可以稳定物种间的相互作用,引发它们共生性质的显著变化,并影响群落功能。