Community-integrated omics links dominance of a microbial generalist to fine-tuned resource usage

Emilie Muller(University of Luxembourg), Nicolás Pinel(University of Luxembourg), Cédric C. Laczny(University of Luxembourg), Michael R. Hoopmann(North Seattle College), Shaman Narayanasamy(University of Luxembourg), Laura Lebrun(University of Luxembourg), Hugo Roume(University of Luxembourg), Jake Lin(University of Luxembourg), Patrick May(University of Luxembourg), Nathan Hicks(Flagstaff Medical Center), Anna Heintz‐Buschart(University of Luxembourg), Linda Wampach(University of Luxembourg), Cindy Liu(Flagstaff Medical Center), Lance B. Price(Flagstaff Medical Center), John D. Gillece(Flagstaff Medical Center), Cédric Guignard(Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology), James M. Schupp(Flagstaff Medical Center), Nikos Vlassis(University of Luxembourg), Nitin S. Baliga(North Seattle College), Robert L. Moritz(North Seattle College), Paul Keim(Flagstaff Medical Center), Paul Wilmes(University of Luxembourg)
Nature Communications
November 26, 2014
Cited by 79Open Access
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Abstract

Microbial communities are complex and dynamic systems that are primarily structured according to their members' ecological niches. To investigate how niche breadth (generalist versus specialist lifestyle strategies) relates to ecological success, we develop and apply an integrative workflow for the multi-omic analysis of oleaginous mixed microbial communities from a biological wastewater treatment plant. Time- and space-resolved coupled metabolomic and taxonomic analyses demonstrate that the community-wide lipid accumulation phenotype is associated with the dominance of the generalist bacterium Candidatus Microthrix spp. By integrating population-level genomic reconstructions (reflecting fundamental niches) with transcriptomic and proteomic data (realised niches), we identify finely tuned gene expression governing resource usage by Candidatus Microthrix parvicella over time. Moreover, our results indicate that the fluctuating environmental conditions constrain the accumulation of genetic variation in Candidatus Microthrix parvicella likely due to fitness trade-offs. Based on our observations, niche breadth has to be considered as an important factor for understanding the evolutionary processes governing (microbial) population sizes and structures in situ.


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