Shank Elizabeth A
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
mSystems. 2018 Apr 10;3(2). doi: 10.1128/mSystems.00155-17. eCollection 2018 Mar-Apr.
Over the last decades, sequencing technologies have transformed our ability to investigate the composition and functional capacity of microbial communities. Even so, critical questions remain about these complex systems that cannot be addressed by the bulk, community-averaged data typically provided by sequencing methods. In this Perspective, I propose that future advances in microbiome research will emerge from considering "the lives of microbes": we need to create methods to explicitly interrogate how microbes exist and interact in native-setting-like microenvironments. This approach includes developing approaches that expose the phenotypic heterogeneity of microbes; exploring the effects of coculture cues on cellular differentiation and metabolite production; and designing visualization systems that capture features of native microbial environments while permitting the nondestructive observation of microbial interactions over space and time with single-cell resolution.
在过去几十年里,测序技术改变了我们研究微生物群落组成和功能能力的方式。即便如此,关于这些复杂系统仍存在一些关键问题,而测序方法通常提供的总体群落平均数据无法解决这些问题。在这篇观点文章中,我提出微生物组研究未来的进展将源于考虑“微生物的生命”:我们需要创建方法来明确探究微生物在类似自然环境的微环境中如何存在和相互作用。这种方法包括开发能够揭示微生物表型异质性的方法;探索共培养线索对细胞分化和代谢物产生的影响;以及设计可视化系统,该系统能够捕捉自然微生物环境的特征,同时允许以单细胞分辨率对微生物在空间和时间上的相互作用进行无损观察。