Dept. of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
PLoS Biol. 2024 Nov 7;22(11):e3002889. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002889. eCollection 2024 Nov.
Previous work shows that a host's resident microbial community can provide resistance against an invading pathogen. However, this community is continuously changing over time due to adaptive mutations, and how these changes affect the invasion resistance of these communities remains poorly understood. To address this knowledge gap, we used an experimental evolution approach in synthetic communities of Escherichia coli and Salmonella Typhimurium to investigate how the invasion resistance of this community against a bacterium expressing a virulent phenotype, i.e., colicin secretion, changes over time. We show that evolved communities accumulate mutations in genes involved in carbon metabolism and motility, while simultaneously becoming less resistant to invasion. By investigating two-species competitions and generating a three-species competition model, we show that this outcome is dependent on the strength of interspecies interactions. Our study demonstrates how adaptive changes in microbial communities can make them more prone to the detrimental effects of an invading species.
先前的工作表明,宿主的常驻微生物群落可以提供抵抗入侵病原体的能力。然而,由于适应性突变,这个群落会随着时间的推移而不断变化,而这些变化如何影响这些群落的入侵抵抗力仍然知之甚少。为了解决这一知识空白,我们使用大肠杆菌和鼠伤寒沙门氏菌的合成群落的实验进化方法,研究了这种群落对表达毒力表型(即 colicin 分泌)的细菌的入侵抵抗力随时间的变化情况。我们发现,进化后的群落积累了参与碳代谢和运动的基因的突变,同时对入侵的抵抗力降低。通过研究两种物种的竞争,并生成一个三种物种的竞争模型,我们表明这种结果取决于种间相互作用的强度。我们的研究表明,微生物群落的适应性变化如何使它们更容易受到入侵物种的不利影响。