Metabolic and Demographic Feedbacks Shape the Emergent Spatial Structure and Function of Microbial Communities
Authored by Sylvie Estrela, Sam P Brown
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003398
Sponsors:
Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT)
Wellcome Trust
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Microbes are predominantly found in surface-attached and spatially
structured polymicrobial communities. Within these communities, microbial cells excrete a wide range of metabolites, setting the stage
for interspecific metabolic interactions. The links, however, between
metabolic and ecological interactions (functional relationships), and
species spatial organization (structural relationships) are still poorly
understood. Here, we use an individual-based modelling framework to
simulate the growth of a two-species surface-attached community where
food (resource) is traded for detoxification (service) and investigate
how metabolic constraints of individual species shape the emergent
structural and functional relationships of the community. We show that
strong metabolic interdependence drives the emergence of mutualism, robust interspecific mixing, and increased community productivity.
Specifically, we observed a striking and highly stable emergent lineage
branching pattern, generating a persistent lineage mixing that was
absent when the metabolic exchange was removed. These emergent community
properties are driven by demographic feedbacks, such that aid from
neighbouring cells directly enhances focal cell growth, which in turn
feeds back to neighbour fecundity. In contrast, weak metabolic
interdependence drives conflict (exploitation or competition), and in
turn greater interspecific segregation. Together, these results support
the idea that species structural and functional relationships represent
the net balance of metabolic interdependencies.
Tags
Competition
Evolution
Cooperation
conflict
architecture
Organization
Escherichia-coli
Mutualism
Pseudomonas-aeruginosa
Biofilms