van Vliet Simon, Hol Felix J H, Weenink Tim, Galajda Peter, Keymer Juan E
Department of Bionanoscience, Kavli Institute of Nanoscience, Delft University of Technology, Lorentzweg 1, Delft, CJ 2628, The Netherlands.
BMC Microbiol. 2014 May 7;14:116. doi: 10.1186/1471-2180-14-116.
Bacterial habitats, such as soil and the gut, are structured at the micrometer scale. Important aspects of microbial life in such spatial ecosystems are migration and colonization. Here we explore the colonization of a structured ecosystem by two neutrally labeled strains of Escherichia coli. Using time-lapse microscopy we studied the colonization of one-dimensional arrays of habitat patches linked by connectors, which were invaded by the two E. coli strains from opposite sides.
The two strains colonize a habitat from opposite sides by a series of traveling waves followed by an expansion front. When population waves collide, they branch into a continuing traveling wave, a reflected wave and a stationary population. When the two strains invade the landscape from opposite sides, they remain segregated in space and often one population will displace the other from most of the habitat. However, when the strains are co-cultured before entering the habitats, they colonize the habitat together and do not separate spatially. Using physically separated, but diffusionally coupled, habitats we show that colonization waves and expansion fronts interact trough diffusible molecules, and not by direct competition for space. Furthermore, we found that colonization outcome is influenced by a culture's history, as the culture with the longest doubling time in bulk conditions tends to take over the largest fraction of the habitat. Finally, we observed that population distributions in parallel habitats located on the same device and inoculated with cells from the same overnight culture are significantly more similar to each other than to patterns in identical habitats located on different devices inoculated with cells from different overnight cultures, even tough all cultures were started from the same -80°C frozen stock.
We found that the colonization of spatially structure habitats by two interacting populations can lead to the formation of complex, but reproducible, spatiotemporal patterns. Furthermore, we showed that chemical interactions between two populations cause them to remain spatially segregated while they compete for habitat space. Finally, we observed that growth properties in bulk conditions correlate with the outcome of habitat colonization. Together, our data show the crucial roles of chemical interactions between populations and a culture's history in determining the outcome of habitat colonization.
诸如土壤和肠道等细菌栖息地在微米尺度上具有结构。在这种空间生态系统中,微生物生命的重要方面是迁移和定殖。在此,我们探究了两种中性标记的大肠杆菌菌株对结构化生态系统的定殖情况。利用延时显微镜,我们研究了由连接器相连的一维栖息地斑块阵列的定殖过程,这两种大肠杆菌菌株从相对的两侧侵入该阵列。
这两种菌株通过一系列行波随后是一个扩张前沿从相对两侧定殖栖息地。当种群波碰撞时,它们分支形成一个持续的行波、一个反射波和一个静止种群。当这两种菌株从相对两侧侵入景观时,它们在空间上保持隔离,并且通常一个种群会将另一个种群从大部分栖息地中取代。然而,当这些菌株在进入栖息地之前进行共培养时,它们会一起定殖栖息地并且在空间上不会分离。利用物理上分离但通过扩散耦合的栖息地,我们表明定殖波和扩张前沿通过可扩散分子相互作用,而不是通过对空间的直接竞争。此外,我们发现定殖结果受培养物历史的影响,因为在批量条件下倍增时间最长的培养物往往占据栖息地的最大部分。最后,我们观察到位于同一装置上并用来自同一过夜培养物的细胞接种的平行栖息地中的种群分布彼此之间的相似性显著高于用来自不同过夜培养物的细胞接种的不同装置上相同栖息地中的模式,即使所有培养物都从相同的 -80°C 冷冻菌液开始。
我们发现两个相互作用种群对空间结构栖息地的定殖可导致形成复杂但可重复的时空模式。此外,我们表明两个种群之间的化学相互作用导致它们在争夺栖息地空间时在空间上保持隔离。最后,我们观察到批量条件下的生长特性与栖息地定殖结果相关。总之,我们的数据表明种群之间的化学相互作用和培养物历史在决定栖息地定殖结果方面的关键作用。