Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Feb 9;6(2):e16791. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0016791.
Microbial consortia constitute a majority of the earth's biomass, but little is known about how these cooperating communities persist despite competition among community members. Theory suggests that non-random spatial structures contribute to the persistence of mixed communities; when particular structures form, they may provide associated community members with a growth advantage over unassociated members. If true, this has implications for the rise and persistence of multi-cellular organisms. However, this theory is difficult to study because we rarely observe initial instances of non-random physical structure in natural populations. Using two engineered strains of Escherichia coli that constitute a synthetic symbiotic microbial consortium, we fortuitously observed such spatial self-organization. This consortium forms a biofilm and, after several days, adopts a defined layered structure that is associated with two unexpected, measurable growth advantages. First, the consortium cannot successfully colonize a new, downstream environment until it self-organizes in the initial environment; in other words, the structure enhances the ability of the consortium to survive environmental disruptions. Second, when the layered structure forms in downstream environments the consortium accumulates significantly more biomass than it did in the initial environment; in other words, the structure enhances the global productivity of the consortium. We also observed that the layered structure only assembles in downstream environments that are colonized by aggregates from a previous, structured community. These results demonstrate roles for self-organization and aggregation in persistence of multi-cellular communities, and also illustrate a role for the techniques of synthetic biology in elucidating fundamental biological principles.
微生物群落构成了地球生物量的大部分,但人们对这些合作社区如何在社区成员之间的竞争中持续存在知之甚少。理论表明,非随机的空间结构有助于混合社区的持续存在;当特定的结构形成时,它们可能为相关的社区成员提供相对于非相关成员的生长优势。如果这是真的,那么这对多细胞生物的出现和持续存在具有重要意义。然而,由于我们很少在自然种群中观察到非随机物理结构的初始实例,因此该理论难以研究。使用两种构成合成共生微生物群落的工程大肠杆菌菌株,我们偶然观察到了这种空间自组织现象。该群落形成生物膜,几天后,采用一种与两个意想不到的、可测量的生长优势相关的定义层状结构。首先,该群落不能在初始环境中自我组织之前成功地殖民新的下游环境;换句话说,这种结构增强了群落抵御环境破坏的能力。其次,当层状结构在下游环境中形成时,群落积累的生物量明显多于在初始环境中;换句话说,这种结构提高了群落的全球生产力。我们还观察到,只有在以前结构化社区的聚集体殖民的下游环境中,层状结构才会组装。这些结果表明自组织和聚集在多细胞群落的持续存在中发挥了作用,也说明了合成生物学技术在阐明基本生物学原理方面的作用。