Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511.
Microbial Sciences Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06516.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2022 Feb 8;119(6). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2111261119.
Microbial communities frequently invade one another as a whole, a phenomenon known as community coalescence. Despite its potential importance for the assembly, dynamics, and stability of microbial consortia, as well as its prospective utility for microbiome engineering, our understanding of the processes that govern it is still very limited. Theory has suggested that microbial communities may exhibit cohesiveness in the face of invasions emerging from collective metabolic interactions across microbes and their environment. This cohesiveness may lead to correlated invasional outcomes, where the fate of a given taxon is determined by that of other members of its community-a hypothesis known as ecological coselection. Here, we have performed over 100 invasion and coalescence experiments with microbial communities of various origins assembled in two different synthetic environments. We show that the dominant members of the primary communities can recruit their rarer partners during coalescence (top-down coselection) and also be recruited by them (bottom-up coselection). With the aid of a consumer-resource model, we found that the emergence of top-down or bottom-up cohesiveness is modulated by the structure of the underlying cross-feeding networks that sustain the coalesced communities. The model also predicts that these two forms of ecological coselection cannot co-occur under our conditions, and we have experimentally confirmed that one can be strong only when the other is weak. Our results provide direct evidence that collective invasions can be expected to produce ecological coselection as a result of cross-feeding interactions at the community level.
微生物群落经常会整体相互入侵,这种现象被称为群落聚结。尽管它对微生物共生体的组装、动态和稳定性具有潜在的重要性,以及对微生物组工程的预期应用,但我们对控制它的过程的理解仍然非常有限。理论表明,微生物群落可能在面对由微生物及其环境之间的集体代谢相互作用引起的入侵时表现出内聚性。这种内聚性可能导致入侵结果的相关性,即给定分类群的命运由其群落中其他成员的命运决定——这一假设被称为生态共选择。在这里,我们在两个不同的合成环境中进行了 100 多次微生物群落的入侵和聚结实验。我们表明,原始群落的主要成员可以在聚结过程中招募它们较稀有的伙伴(自上而下的共选择),也可以被它们招募(自下而上的共选择)。借助消费者-资源模型,我们发现自上而下或自下而上的内聚性的出现是由维持聚结群落的基础交叉喂养网络的结构所调节的。该模型还预测,在我们的条件下,这两种形式的生态共选择不能同时发生,我们已经通过实验证实,一种形式只能在另一种形式较弱时才会很强。我们的研究结果提供了直接的证据,表明由于群落水平的交叉喂养相互作用,集体入侵可能会产生生态共选择。