Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2011 Oct;9(10):e1001184. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001184. Epub 2011 Oct 25.
Soil grains harbor an astonishing diversity of Streptomyces strains producing diverse secondary metabolites. However, it is not understood how this genotypic and chemical diversity is ecologically maintained. While secondary metabolites are known to mediate signaling and warfare among strains, no systematic measurement of the resulting interaction networks has been available. We developed a high-throughput platform to measure all pairwise interactions among 64 Streptomyces strains isolated from several individual grains of soil. We acquired more than 10,000 time-lapse movies of colony development of each isolate on media containing compounds produced by each of the other isolates. We observed a rich set of such sender-receiver interactions, including inhibition and promotion of growth and aerial mycelium formation. The probability that two random isolates interact is balanced; it is neither close to zero nor one. The interactions are not random: the distribution of the number of interactions per sender is bimodal and there is enrichment for reciprocity--if strain A inhibits or promotes B, it is likely that B also inhibits or promotes A. Such reciprocity is further enriched in strains derived from the same soil grain, suggesting that it may be a property of coexisting communities. Interactions appear to evolve rapidly: isolates with identical 16S rRNA sequences can have very different interaction patterns. A simple eco-evolutionary model of bacteria interacting through antibiotic production shows how fast evolution of production and resistance can lead to the observed statistical properties of the network. In the model, communities are evolutionarily unstable--they are constantly being invaded by strains with new sets of interactions. This combination of experimental and theoretical observations suggests that diverse Streptomyces communities do not represent a stable ecological state but an intrinsically dynamic eco-evolutionary phenomenon.
土壤颗粒中蕴藏着令人惊讶的多样性的链霉菌菌株,这些菌株产生多样的次生代谢物。然而,目前尚不清楚这种基因型和化学多样性是如何在生态上得以维持的。虽然已知次生代谢物介导了菌株之间的信号传递和斗争,但还没有系统地测量由此产生的相互作用网络。我们开发了一种高通量平台,用于测量从土壤中几个个体颗粒中分离出的 64 株链霉菌之间的所有成对相互作用。我们获得了每个分离株在含有其他每个分离株产生的化合物的培养基上生长的超过 10000 个延时电影。我们观察到了丰富的这种发送方-接收方相互作用集,包括生长和气生菌丝形成的抑制和促进。两个随机分离株相互作用的概率是平衡的;既不是接近零也不是一。这些相互作用不是随机的:每个发送方的相互作用次数的分布呈双峰,互惠性富集——如果菌株 A 抑制或促进 B,那么菌株 B 也很可能抑制或促进 A。这种互惠性在来自同一土壤颗粒的菌株中进一步富集,表明它可能是共存群落的一个特性。相互作用似乎在快速进化:具有相同 16S rRNA 序列的分离株可能具有非常不同的相互作用模式。一个通过抗生素产生来相互作用的细菌的简单生态进化模型表明,生产和抗性的快速进化如何导致网络观察到的统计特性。在该模型中,群落是进化不稳定的——它们不断被具有新的相互作用集的菌株入侵。这些实验和理论观察的结合表明,多样化的链霉菌群落不是一个稳定的生态状态,而是一个内在的动态生态进化现象。