Cell Reports
Volume 7, Issue 4, 22 May 2014, Pages 1104-1115
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Article
Metabolic Resource Allocation in Individual Microbes Determines Ecosystem Interactions and Spatial Dynamics

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.03.070Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Microbial community dynamics can be inferred from intracellular metabolism

  • Metabolic interactions drive engineered microbial consortia to predictable equilibria

  • Spatial organization shapes the dynamics of mutualism in a metabolic eclipse scenario

  • Computation of Microbial Ecosystems in Time and Space (COMETS): a flexible tool

Summary

The interspecies exchange of metabolites plays a key role in the spatiotemporal dynamics of microbial communities. This raises the question of whether ecosystem-level behavior of structured communities can be predicted using genome-scale metabolic models for multiple organisms. We developed a modeling framework that integrates dynamic flux balance analysis with diffusion on a lattice and applied it to engineered communities. First, we predicted and experimentally confirmed the species ratio to which a two-species mutualistic consortium converges and the equilibrium composition of a newly engineered three-member community. We next identified a specific spatial arrangement of colonies, which gives rise to what we term the “eclipse dilemma”: does a competitor placed between a colony and its cross-feeding partner benefit or hurt growth of the original colony? Our experimentally validated finding that the net outcome is beneficial highlights the complex nature of metabolic interactions in microbial communities while at the same time demonstrating their predictability.

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This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/).

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Co-first author

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Present address: Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA

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Present address: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA

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Present address: Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK

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Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844, USA