Centler Florian, Thullner Martin
Department of Environmental Microbiology, UFZ - Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research Leipzig, Germany.
Front Microbiol. 2015 Feb 2;6:40. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.00040. eCollection 2015.
Substrate competition is a common mode of microbial interaction in natural environments. While growth properties play an important and well-studied role in competition, we here focus on the influence of motility. In a simulated two-strain community populating a homogeneous two-dimensional environment, strains competed for a common substrate and only differed in their chemotactic preference, either responding more sensitively to a chemoattractant excreted by themselves or responding more sensitively to substrate. Starting from homogeneous distributions, three possible behaviors were observed depending on the competitors' chemotactic preferences: (i) distributions remained homogeneous, (ii) patterns formed but dissolved at a later time point, resulting in a shifted community composition, and (iii) patterns emerged and led to the extinction of one strain. When patterns formed, the more aggregating strain populated the core of microbial aggregates where starving conditions prevailed, while the less aggregating strain populated the more productive zones at the fringe or outside aggregates, leading to a competitive advantage of the less aggregating strain. The presence of a competitor was found to modulate a strain's behavior, either suppressing or promoting aggregate formation. This observation provides a potential mechanism by which an aggregated lifestyle might evolve even if it is initially disadvantageous. Adverse effects can be avoided as a competitor hinders aggregate formation by a strain which has just acquired this ability. The presented results highlight both, the importance of microbial motility for competition and pattern formation, and the importance of the temporal evolution, or history, of microbial communities when trying to explain an observed distribution.
底物竞争是自然环境中微生物相互作用的常见模式。虽然生长特性在竞争中起着重要且已得到充分研究的作用,但我们在此关注运动性的影响。在一个模拟的双菌株群落中,该群落分布在均匀的二维环境中,菌株竞争一种共同的底物,且仅在趋化偏好上有所不同,要么对自身分泌的化学引诱剂反应更敏感,要么对底物反应更敏感。从均匀分布开始,根据竞争者的趋化偏好观察到三种可能的行为:(i)分布保持均匀,(ii)形成的模式在稍后的时间点溶解,导致群落组成发生变化,以及(iii)出现模式并导致一个菌株灭绝。当形成模式时,聚集性更强的菌株占据微生物聚集体的核心,那里存在饥饿条件,而聚集性较弱的菌株占据边缘或聚集体外部生产力更高的区域,从而导致聚集性较弱的菌株具有竞争优势。发现竞争者的存在会调节菌株的行为,要么抑制要么促进聚集体形成。这一观察结果提供了一种潜在机制,通过该机制,即使聚集性生活方式最初不利,它也可能进化。当一个刚获得这种能力的菌株形成聚集体时,竞争者会阻碍其聚集体形成,从而避免不利影响。所呈现的结果突出了微生物运动性对于竞争和模式形成的重要性,以及在试图解释观察到的分布时微生物群落时间演化或历史的重要性。