Taxa-function robustness in microbial communities

被引:45
|
作者
Eng, Alexander [1 ]
Borenstein, Elhanan [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Genome Sci, Seattle, WA 98102 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Dept Comp Sci & Engn, Seattle, WA 98102 USA
[3] Santa Fe Inst, Santa Fe, NM 87501 USA
来源
MICROBIOME | 2018年 / 6卷
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Microbial community; Taxa-function relationship; Robustness; FITNESS LANDSCAPES; GUT MICROBIOME; DIVERSITY; BIODIVERSITY; EVOLUTION; GENES; KEGG;
D O I
10.1186/s40168-018-0425-4
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Background: The species composition of a microbial community is rarely fixed and often experiences fluctuations of varying degrees and at varying frequencies. These perturbations to a community's taxonomic profile naturally also alter the community's functional profile-the aggregate set of genes encoded by community members-ultimately altering the community's overall functional capacities. The magnitude of such functional changes and the specific shift that will occur in each function, however, are strongly dependent on how genes are distributed across community members' genomes. This gene distribution, in turn, is determined by the taxonomic composition of the community and would markedly differ, for example, between communities composed of species with similar genomic content vs. communities composed of species whose genomes encode relatively distinct gene sets. Combined, these observations suggest that community functional robustness to taxonomic perturbations could vary widely across communities with different compositions, yet, to date, a systematic study of the inherent link between community composition and robustness is lacking. Results: In this study, we examined how a community's taxonomic composition influences the robustness of that community's functional profile to taxonomic perturbation (here termed taxa-function robustness) across a wide array of environments. Using a novel simulation-based computational model to quantify this taxa-function robustness in host-associated and non-host-associated communities, we find notable differences in robustness between communities inhabiting different body sites, including significantly higher robustness in gut communities compared to vaginal communities that cannot be attributed solely to differences in species richness. We additionally find between-site differences in the robustness of specific functions, some of which are potentially related to site-specific environmental conditions. These taxa-function robustness differences are most strongly associated with differences in overall functional redundancy, though other aspects of gene distribution also influence taxa-function robustness in certain body environments, and are sufficient to cluster communities by environment. Further analysis revealed a correspondence between our robustness estimates and taxonomic and functional shifts observed across human-associated communities. Conclusions: Our analysis approach revealed intriguing taxa-function robustness variation across environments and identified features of community and gene distribution that impact robustness. This approach could be further applied for estimating taxa-function robustness in novel communities and for informing the design of synthetic communities with specific robustness requirements.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] Carbon-Nitrogen-Sulfur-Related Microbial Taxa and Genes Maintained the Stability of Microbial Communities in Coals
    Li, Yang
    Liu, Bingjun
    Chen, Jian
    Yue, Xuelian
    ACS OMEGA, 2022, : 22671 - 22681
  • [12] Copiotrophic taxa in pig manure mitigate nitrogen limitation of soil microbial communities
    Li, Chunkai
    Li, Xianping
    Min, Kaikai
    Liu, Ting
    Li, Dejun
    Xu, Jingjing
    Zhao, Yexin
    Li, Huixin
    Chen, Hao
    Hu, Feng
    CHEMOSPHERE, 2022, 301
  • [13] Molecular approaches for taxa discovery in plant-associated soil microbial communities
    Rosenzweig, N.
    Kang, J.
    Kinkel, L. L.
    Bradeen, J. M.
    PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2008, 98 (06) : S136 - S136
  • [14] A simple rule for predicting function of microbial communities
    Kryazhimskiy, Sergey
    CELL, 2024, 187 (12) : 2905 - 2906
  • [16] Modeling taxa-abundance distributions in microbial communities using environmental sequence data
    Sloan, William T.
    Woodcock, Stephen
    Lunn, Mary
    Head, Ian M.
    Curtis, Thomas P.
    MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, 2007, 53 (03) : 443 - 455
  • [17] In search of microbial indicator taxa: shifts in stream bacterial communities along an urbanization gradient
    Simonin, Marie
    Voss, Kristofor A.
    Hassett, Brooke A.
    Rocca, Jennifer D.
    Wang, Si-Yi
    Bier, Raven L.
    Violin, Christy R.
    Wright, Justin P.
    Bernhardt, Emily S.
    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2019, 21 (10) : 3653 - 3668
  • [18] Linking microbial taxa with function in artificially structured apple rhizosphere microbiomes
    Somera, T.
    Vetcos, M.
    Freilich, S.
    Mazzola, M.
    PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2021, 111 (10) : 80 - 80
  • [19] Biogeographic Patterns in Members of Globally Distributed and Dominant Taxa Found in Port Microbial Communities
    Ghannam, Ryan B.
    Schaerer, Laura G.
    Butler, Timothy M.
    Techtmann, Stephen M.
    MSPHERE, 2020, 5 (01)
  • [20] Modeling Taxa-Abundance Distributions in Microbial Communities using Environmental Sequence Data
    William T. Sloan
    Stephen Woodcock
    Mary Lunn
    Ian M. Head
    Thomas P. Curtis
    Microbial Ecology, 2007, 53 : 443 - 455