Title
An enormous potential for niche construction through bacterial cross-feeding in a homogeneous environmentVersion
Published versionDocument type
Journal ArticleLanguage
EnglishRights
© 2018 San Roman, WagnerAccess
Open accessPublisher’s version
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006340Published at
PLOS Computational Biology n. 7, vol. 14, n. art. e1006340Publisher
Morgan Langille, DAL, CANADAKeywords
Glucose metabolism
Metabolic networks
Glucose
Metabolites ... [+]
Metabolic networks
Glucose
Metabolites ... [+]
Glucose metabolism
Metabolic networks
Glucose
Metabolites
Excretion
Ecological niches
Niche construction
Bacterial evolution [-]
Metabolic networks
Glucose
Metabolites
Excretion
Ecological niches
Niche construction
Bacterial evolution [-]
Abstract
Microorganisms modify their environment by excreting by-products of metabolism, which can create new ecological niches that can help microbial populations diversify. A striking example comes from expe ... [+]
Microorganisms modify their environment by excreting by-products of metabolism, which can create new ecological niches that can help microbial populations diversify. A striking example comes from experimental evolution of genetically identical Escherichia coli populations that are grown in a homogeneous environment with the single carbon source glucose. In such experiments, stable communities of genetically diverse cross-feeding E. coli cells
readily emerge. Some cells that consume the primary carbon source glucose excrete a secondary carbon source, such as acetate, that sustains other community members. Few such
cross-feeding polymorphisms are known experimentally, because they are difficult to screen for. We studied the potential of bacterial metabolism to create new ecological niches based on cross-feeding. To do so, we used genome scale models of the metabolism of E. coli and metabolisms of similar complexity, to identify unique pairs of primary and secondary carbon
sources in these metabolisms. We then combined dynamic flux balance analysis with analytical calculations to identify which pair of carbon sources can sustain a polymorphic crossfeeding community. We identified almost 10,000 such pairs of carbon sources, each of them corresponding to a unique ecological niche. Bacterial metabolism shows an immense potential for the construction of new ecological niches through cross feeding. [-]
Funder
Comisión EuropeaProgram
Advanced GrantSwiss National Science Foundation
Number
73987431003A_172887
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