Evolution and stability of complex microbial communities driven by trade-offs

Author:

Huang YanqingORCID,Mukherjee AvikORCID,Schink Severin,Benites Nina Catherine,Basan MarkusORCID

Abstract

AbstractMicrobial communities are ubiquitous in nature and play an important role in ecology and human health. Cross-feeding is thought to be core to microbial communities, though it remains unclear precisely why it emerges. Why have multi-species microbial communities evolved in many contexts and what protects microbial consortia from invasion? Here, we review recent insights into the emergence and stability of coexistence in microbial communities. A particular focus is the long-term evolutionary stability of coexistence, as observed for microbial communities that spontaneously evolved in the E. coli long-term evolution experiment (LTEE). We analyze these findings in the context of recent work on trade-offs between competing microbial objectives, which can constitute a mechanistic basis for the emergence of coexistence. Coexisting communities, rather than monocultures of the ‘fittest’ single strain, can form stable endpoints of evolutionary trajectories. Hence, the emergence of coexistence might be an obligatory outcome in the evolution of microbial communities. This implies that rather than embodying fragile metastable configurations, some microbial communities can constitute formidable ecosystems that are difficult to disrupt.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Giovanni Armenise-Harvard Foundation

NSF | National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

HMS | Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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