Molecular Cell Physiology, Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, VU University Amsterdam Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Systems Ecology, Department of Ecological Sciences, Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, VU University Amsterdam Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Front Microbiol. 2014 Mar 26;5:125. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00125. eCollection 2014.
Molecular ecology approaches are rapidly advancing our insights into the microorganisms involved in the degradation of marine oil spills and their metabolic potentials. Yet, many questions remain open: how do oil-degrading microbial communities assemble in terms of functional diversity, species abundances and organization and what are the drivers? How do the functional properties of microorganisms scale to processes at the ecosystem level? How does mass flow among species, and which factors and species control and regulate fluxes, stability and other ecosystem functions? Can generic rules on oil-degradation be derived, and what drivers underlie these rules? How can we engineer oil-degrading microbial communities such that toxic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are degraded faster? These types of questions apply to the field of microbial ecology in general. We outline how recent advances in single-species systems biology might be extended to help answer these questions. We argue that bottom-up mechanistic modeling allows deciphering the respective roles and interactions among microorganisms. In particular constraint-based, metagenome-derived community-scale flux balance analysis appears suited for this goal as it allows calculating degradation-related fluxes based on physiological constraints and growth strategies, without needing detailed kinetic information. We subsequently discuss what is required to make these approaches successful, and identify a need to better understand microbial physiology in order to advance microbial ecology. We advocate the development of databases containing microbial physiological data. Answering the posed questions is far from trivial. Oil-degrading communities are, however, an attractive setting to start testing systems biology-derived models and hypotheses as they are relatively simple in diversity and key activities, with several key players being isolated and a high availability of experimental data and approaches.
分子生态学方法正在迅速提高我们对参与海洋溢油降解的微生物及其代谢潜力的认识。然而,仍有许多问题尚未解决:在功能多样性、物种丰度和组织方面,石油降解微生物群落是如何组装的?微生物的功能特性如何与生态系统水平的过程相关?物种之间的物质流动如何,哪些因素和物种控制和调节通量、稳定性和其他生态系统功能?是否可以得出关于石油降解的通用规则,以及这些规则的基础是什么?我们如何设计石油降解微生物群落,使毒性多环芳烃更快降解?这些问题一般适用于微生物生态学领域。我们概述了如何将单种系统生物学的最新进展扩展到帮助回答这些问题。我们认为,自下而上的机制模型允许破译微生物之间的各自作用和相互作用。特别是基于约束的、基于宏基因组的群落尺度通量平衡分析似乎适合这个目标,因为它可以根据生理约束和生长策略计算与降解相关的通量,而不需要详细的动力学信息。随后,我们讨论了使这些方法成功所需的条件,并确定了需要更好地了解微生物生理学,以推进微生物生态学。我们提倡开发包含微生物生理学数据的数据库。回答提出的问题绝非易事。然而,石油降解群落是一个有吸引力的设置,可以开始测试基于系统生物学的模型和假设,因为它们在多样性和关键活动方面相对简单,有几个关键参与者被分离出来,并且有大量的实验数据和方法可用。