Species interactions constrain adaptation and preserve ecological stability in an experimental microbial community

被引:0
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作者
Jake N. Barber
Luke C. Nicholson
Laura C. Woods
Louise M. Judd
Aysha L. Sezmis
Jane Hawkey
Kathryn E. Holt
Michael J. McDonald
机构
[1] Monash University: Clayton,School of Biological Sciences
[2] Monash University,Department of Infectious Diseases, Central Clinical School
[3] London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine,Department of Infection Biology, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases
来源
The ISME Journal | 2022年 / 16卷
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摘要
Species loss within a microbial community can increase resource availability and spur adaptive evolution. Environmental shifts that cause species loss or fluctuations in community composition are expected to become more common, so it is important to understand the evolutionary forces that shape the stability and function of the emergent community. Here we study experimental cultures of a simple, ecologically stable community of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Lactobacillus plantarum, in order to understand how the presence or absence of a species impacts coexistence over evolutionary timescales. We found that evolution in coculture led to drastically altered evolutionary outcomes for L. plantarum, but not S. cerevisiae. Both monoculture- and co-culture-evolved L. plantarum evolved dozens of mutations over 925 generations of evolution, but only L. plantarum that had evolved in isolation from S. cerevisiae lost the capacity to coexist with S. cerevisiae. We find that the evolutionary loss of ecological stability corresponds with fitness differences between monoculture-evolved L. plantarum and S. cerevisiae and genetic changes that repeatedly evolve across the replicate populations of L. plantarum. This work shows how coevolution within a community can prevent destabilising evolution in individual species, thereby preserving ecological diversity and stability, despite rapid adaptation.
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页码:1442 / 1452
页数:10
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