Romdhane Sana, Huet Sarah, Spor Aymé, Bru David, Breuil Marie-Christine, Philippot Laurent
Univ. Bourgogne Franche-Comté, INRAE, Institut Agro, Agroécologie, F-21000, Dijon, France.
Environ Microbiome. 2024 Mar 19;19(1):18. doi: 10.1186/s40793-024-00559-4.
Microbial communities are of tremendous importance for ecosystem functioning and yet we know little about the ecological processes driving the assembly of these communities in the environment. Here, we used an unprecedented experimental approach based on the manipulation of physical distance between neighboring cells during soil colonization to determine the role of bacterial interactions in soil community assembly. We hypothesized that experimentally manipulating the physical distance between bacterial cells will modify the interaction strengths leading to differences in microbial community composition, with increasing distance between neighbors favoring poor competitors.
We found significant differences in both bacterial community diversity, composition and co-occurrence networks after soil colonization that were related to physical distancing. We show that reducing distances between cells resulted in a loss of bacterial diversity, with at least 41% of the dominant OTUs being significantly affected by physical distancing. Our results suggest that physical distancing may differentially modulate competitiveness between neighboring species depending on the taxa present in the community. The mixing of communities that assembled at high and low cell densities did not reveal any "home field advantage" during coalescence. This confirms that the observed differences in competitiveness were due to biotic rather than abiotic filtering.
Our study demonstrates that the competitiveness of bacteria strongly depends on cell density and community membership, therefore highlighting the fundamental role of microbial interactions in the assembly of soil communities.
微生物群落对生态系统功能极为重要,但我们对驱动这些群落在环境中组装的生态过程知之甚少。在此,我们采用了一种前所未有的实验方法,即通过在土壤定殖过程中操纵相邻细胞之间的物理距离,来确定细菌相互作用在土壤群落组装中的作用。我们假设,通过实验操纵细菌细胞之间的物理距离将改变相互作用强度,导致微生物群落组成出现差异,相邻细胞之间距离增加有利于竞争力较弱的竞争者。
我们发现土壤定殖后细菌群落多样性、组成和共现网络存在与物理距离相关的显著差异。我们表明,细胞间距离减小导致细菌多样性丧失,至少41%的优势操作分类单元受到物理距离的显著影响。我们的结果表明,物理距离可能根据群落中存在的分类群不同地调节相邻物种之间的竞争力。在合并过程中,以高细胞密度和低细胞密度组装的群落混合并未显示出任何“主场优势”。这证实了观察到的竞争力差异是由于生物过滤而非非生物过滤。
我们的研究表明,细菌的竞争力强烈依赖于细胞密度和群落成员,因此突出了微生物相互作用在土壤群落组装中的基本作用。