Department of Bioprocess Engineering, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany.
Biotechnol Bioeng. 2011 Aug;108(8):1900-11. doi: 10.1002/bit.23126. Epub 2011 Apr 7.
Bacteria in natural habitats only occur in consortia together with various other species. Characterization of bacterial species, however, is normally done by laboratory testing of pure isolates. Any interactions that might appear during growth in mixed-culture are obviously missed by this approach. Existing experimental studies mainly focus on two-species mixed cultures with species specifically chosen for their known growth characteristics, and their anticipated interactions. Various theoretical mathematical studies dealing with mixed cultures and possible interspecies effects exist, but often models cannot be validated due to a lack of experimental data. Here, we present a concept for the identification of interspecies effects in mixed cultures with arbitrary and unknown single-species properties. Model structure and parameters were inferred from single-species experiments for the reproduction of mixed-culture experiments by simulation. A mixed culture consisting of the three-species Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Burkholderia cepacia, and Staphylococcus aureus served as a model system. For species-specific enumeration a quantitative terminal restriction length polymorphism (qT-RFLP) assay was used. Based on models fitted to single-species cultivations, the outcome of mixed-culture experiments was predicted. Deviations of simulation results and experimental findings were then used to design additional single-cell experiments, to modify the corresponding growth kinetics, and to update model parameters. Eventually, the resulting mixed-culture dynamics was predicted and compared again to experimental results. During this iterative cycle, it became evident that the observed coexistence of P. aeruginosa and B. cepacia in mixed-culture chemostat experiments cannot be explained on the basis of glucose as the only substrate. After extension of growth kinetics, that is, for use of amino acids as secondary substrates, mixed-culture simulations represented the experimental findings very well. According to the model structure, as motivated by single-species experiments, the growth of P. aeruginosa and B. cepacia on glucose and amino acids could be assumed to be independent of each other. In contrast, both substrates are taken up simultaneously by S. aureus.
在自然栖息地中,细菌仅与各种其他物种一起以共生体的形式存在。然而,细菌物种的特征通常是通过对纯分离物的实验室测试来完成的。通过这种方法,显然会错过混合培养物中可能出现的任何相互作用。现有的实验研究主要集中在具有特定已知生长特性的两种混合培养物上,以及它们预期的相互作用。存在涉及混合培养物和可能的种间相互作用的各种理论数学研究,但由于缺乏实验数据,通常无法验证模型。在这里,我们提出了一种用于识别混合培养物中具有任意和未知单物种特性的种间相互作用的概念。通过模拟再现混合培养物实验,从单物种实验中推断出模型结构和参数。由三种细菌假单胞菌、洋葱伯克霍尔德菌和金黄色葡萄球菌组成的混合培养物作为模型系统。为了进行物种特异性计数,使用了定量末端限制性长度多态性(qT-RFLP)测定法。基于拟合单物种培养物的模型,预测了混合培养物实验的结果。然后,将模拟结果和实验结果的偏差用于设计附加的单细胞实验,以修改相应的生长动力学并更新模型参数。最终,预测了混合培养物的动态并再次与实验结果进行比较。在这个迭代循环中,很明显,在混合培养物恒化器实验中观察到的假单胞菌和洋葱伯克霍尔德菌的共存不能仅基于葡萄糖作为唯一底物来解释。在扩展生长动力学之后,也就是说,使用氨基酸作为次级底物时,混合培养物模拟非常好地代表了实验结果。根据由单物种实验激发的模型结构,假单胞菌和洋葱伯克霍尔德菌对葡萄糖和氨基酸的生长可以假定彼此独立。相比之下,金黄色葡萄球菌同时摄取两种底物。