Estrela Sylvie, Whiteley Marvin, Brown Sam P
Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK; Centre for Immunity, Infection and Evolution, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9 3JT, UK; Department of Biology and BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Department of Molecular Biosciences, Institute of Cellular and Molecular Biology, Center for Infectious Disease, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA.
Trends Microbiol. 2015 Mar;23(3):134-41. doi: 10.1016/j.tim.2014.11.005. Epub 2014 Dec 9.
The human microbiome is a vast reservoir of microbial diversity and increasingly recognized to have a fundamental role in human health. In polymicrobial communities, the presence of one species can modulate the demography (i.e., growth and distribution) of other species. These demographic impacts generate feedbacks in multispecies interactions, which can be magnified in spatially structured populations (e.g., host-associated communities). Here, we argue that demographic feedbacks between species are central to microbiome development, shaping whether and how potential metabolic interactions come to be realized between expanding lineages of bacteria. Understanding how demographic feedbacks tune metabolic interactions and in turn shape microbiome structure and function is now a key challenge to our abilities to better manage microbiome health.
人类微生物组是微生物多样性的巨大储存库,并且越来越被认为在人类健康中具有重要作用。在多微生物群落中,一个物种的存在可以调节其他物种的种群动态(即生长和分布)。这些种群动态影响在多物种相互作用中产生反馈,而这种反馈在空间结构种群(如宿主相关群落)中可能会被放大。在此,我们认为物种间的种群动态反馈对于微生物组的发育至关重要,它决定了正在扩展的细菌谱系之间潜在的代谢相互作用是否以及如何得以实现。了解种群动态反馈如何调节代谢相互作用进而塑造微生物组的结构和功能,是目前我们更好地管理微生物组健康能力面临的关键挑战。