Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 21218, USA.
School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Shandong University, Qingdao, 26600, People's Republic of China.
Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2020 Jul;104(14):6413-6426. doi: 10.1007/s00253-020-10663-3. Epub 2020 May 29.
Symbiotic partnerships are widespread in nature and in industrial applications yet there are limited examples of laboratory communities. Therefore, using common photobionts and mycobionts similar to those in natural lichens, we create an artificial lichen-like symbiosis. While Aspergillus nidulans and Aspergillus niger could not obtain nutrients from the green algae, Chlorella, and Scenedesmus, the cyanobacteria Nostoc sp. PCC 6720 was able to support fungal growth and also elevated the accumulation of total biomass. The Nostoc-Aspergillus co-cultures grew on light and CO in an inorganic BG11 liquid medium without any external organic carbon and fungal mycelia were observed to peripherally contact with the Nostoc cells in liquid and on solid media at lower cell densities. Overall biomass levels were reduced after implementing physical barriers to indicate that physical contact between cyanobacteria and heterotrophic microbes may promote symbiotic growth. The synthetic Nostoc-Aspergillus nidulans co-cultures also exhibited robust growth and stability when cultivated in wastewater over days to weeks in a semi-continuous manner when compared with axenic cultivation of either species. These Nostoc-Aspergillus consortia reveal species-dependent and mutually beneficial design principles that can yield stable lichen-like co-cultures and provide insights into microbial communities that can facilitate sustainability studies and broader applications in the future. KEY POINTS: • Artificial lichen-like symbiosis was built with wild-type cyanobacteria and fungi. • Physical barriers decreased biomass production from artificial lichen co-cultures. • Artificial lichen adapted to grow and survive in wastewater for 5 weeks.
共生关系在自然界和工业应用中广泛存在,但实验室群落的例子有限。因此,我们使用与天然地衣中相似的常见光合生物和共生真菌,创造了一种类似人工地衣的共生关系。虽然青霉属真菌 Aspergillus nidulans 和 Aspergillus niger 不能从绿藻小球藻和栅藻中获取营养,但蓝藻 Nostoc sp. PCC 6720 能够支持真菌生长,并提高总生物量的积累。 Nostoc-Aspergillus 共培养物在光照和 CO 下于无机 BG11 液体培养基中生长,无需任何外部有机碳,并且在较低细胞密度下,在液体和固体培养基中观察到真菌菌丝体与 Nostoc 细胞外周接触。实施物理障碍以表明蓝藻和异养微生物之间的物理接触可能促进共生生长后,整体生物量水平降低。与两种物种的无菌培养相比,合成 Nostoc-Aspergillus nidulans 共培养物在废水中共培养数天至数周的半连续方式中也表现出稳健的生长和稳定性。这些 Nostoc-Aspergillus 联合体揭示了依赖于物种和互利的设计原则,可产生稳定的类似地衣的共培养物,并为微生物群落提供了见解,有助于未来的可持续性研究和更广泛的应用。要点:• 用野生型蓝藻和真菌构建了类似人工地衣的共生关系。• 物理障碍降低了人工地衣共培养物的生物量生产。• 人工地衣适应在废水中生长和存活 5 周。