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Ecological Stability Properties of Microbial Communities Assessed by Flow Cytometry

Natural microbial communities affect human life in countless ways, ranging from global biogeochemical cycles to the treatment of wastewater and health via the human microbiome. In order to probe, monitor, and eventually control these communities, fast detection and evaluation methods are required. I...

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Autores principales: Liu, Zishu, Cichocki, Nicolas, Bonk, Fabian, Günther, Susanne, Schattenberg, Florian, Harms, Hauke, Centler, Florian, Müller, Susann
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5770544/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29359193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00564-17
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author Liu, Zishu
Cichocki, Nicolas
Bonk, Fabian
Günther, Susanne
Schattenberg, Florian
Harms, Hauke
Centler, Florian
Müller, Susann
author_facet Liu, Zishu
Cichocki, Nicolas
Bonk, Fabian
Günther, Susanne
Schattenberg, Florian
Harms, Hauke
Centler, Florian
Müller, Susann
author_sort Liu, Zishu
collection PubMed
description Natural microbial communities affect human life in countless ways, ranging from global biogeochemical cycles to the treatment of wastewater and health via the human microbiome. In order to probe, monitor, and eventually control these communities, fast detection and evaluation methods are required. In order to facilitate rapid community analysis and monitor a community’s dynamic behavior with high resolution, we here apply community flow cytometry, which provides single-cell-based high-dimensional data characterizing communities with high acuity over time. To interpret time series data, we draw inspiration from macroecology, in which a rich set of concepts has been developed for describing population dynamics. We focus on the stability paradigm as a promising candidate to interpret such data in an intuitive and actionable way and present a rapid workflow to monitor stability properties of complex microbial ecosystems. Based on single-cell data, we compute the stability properties resistance, resilience, displacement speed, and elasticity. For resilience, we also introduce a method which can be implemented for continuous online community monitoring. The proposed workflow was tested in a long-term continuous reactor experiment employing both an artificial and a complex microbial community, which were exposed to identical short-term disturbances. The computed stability properties uncovered the superior stability of the complex community and demonstrated the global applicability of the protocol to any microbiome. The workflow is able to support high temporal sample densities below bacterial generation times. This may provide new opportunities to unravel unknown ecological paradigms of natural microbial communities, with applications to environmental, biotechnological, and health-related microbiomes. IMPORTANCE Microbial communities drive many processes which affect human well-being directly, as in the human microbiome, or indirectly, as in natural environments or in biotechnological applications. Due to their complexity, their dynamics over time is difficult to monitor, and current sequence-based approaches are limited with respect to the temporal resolution. However, in order to eventually control microbial community dynamics, monitoring schemes of high temporal resolution are required. Flow cytometry provides single-cell-based data in the required temporal resolution, and we here use such data to compute stability properties as easy to interpret univariate indicators of microbial community dynamics. Such monitoring tools will allow for a fast, continuous, and cost-effective screening of stability states of microbiomes. Applicable to various environments, including bioreactors, surface water, and the human body, it will contribute to the development of control schemes to manipulate microbial community structures and performances.
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spelling pubmed-57705442018-01-22 Ecological Stability Properties of Microbial Communities Assessed by Flow Cytometry Liu, Zishu Cichocki, Nicolas Bonk, Fabian Günther, Susanne Schattenberg, Florian Harms, Hauke Centler, Florian Müller, Susann mSphere Research Article Natural microbial communities affect human life in countless ways, ranging from global biogeochemical cycles to the treatment of wastewater and health via the human microbiome. In order to probe, monitor, and eventually control these communities, fast detection and evaluation methods are required. In order to facilitate rapid community analysis and monitor a community’s dynamic behavior with high resolution, we here apply community flow cytometry, which provides single-cell-based high-dimensional data characterizing communities with high acuity over time. To interpret time series data, we draw inspiration from macroecology, in which a rich set of concepts has been developed for describing population dynamics. We focus on the stability paradigm as a promising candidate to interpret such data in an intuitive and actionable way and present a rapid workflow to monitor stability properties of complex microbial ecosystems. Based on single-cell data, we compute the stability properties resistance, resilience, displacement speed, and elasticity. For resilience, we also introduce a method which can be implemented for continuous online community monitoring. The proposed workflow was tested in a long-term continuous reactor experiment employing both an artificial and a complex microbial community, which were exposed to identical short-term disturbances. The computed stability properties uncovered the superior stability of the complex community and demonstrated the global applicability of the protocol to any microbiome. The workflow is able to support high temporal sample densities below bacterial generation times. This may provide new opportunities to unravel unknown ecological paradigms of natural microbial communities, with applications to environmental, biotechnological, and health-related microbiomes. IMPORTANCE Microbial communities drive many processes which affect human well-being directly, as in the human microbiome, or indirectly, as in natural environments or in biotechnological applications. Due to their complexity, their dynamics over time is difficult to monitor, and current sequence-based approaches are limited with respect to the temporal resolution. However, in order to eventually control microbial community dynamics, monitoring schemes of high temporal resolution are required. Flow cytometry provides single-cell-based data in the required temporal resolution, and we here use such data to compute stability properties as easy to interpret univariate indicators of microbial community dynamics. Such monitoring tools will allow for a fast, continuous, and cost-effective screening of stability states of microbiomes. Applicable to various environments, including bioreactors, surface water, and the human body, it will contribute to the development of control schemes to manipulate microbial community structures and performances. American Society for Microbiology 2018-01-17 /pmc/articles/PMC5770544/ /pubmed/29359193 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00564-17 Text en Copyright © 2018 Liu et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Liu, Zishu
Cichocki, Nicolas
Bonk, Fabian
Günther, Susanne
Schattenberg, Florian
Harms, Hauke
Centler, Florian
Müller, Susann
Ecological Stability Properties of Microbial Communities Assessed by Flow Cytometry
title Ecological Stability Properties of Microbial Communities Assessed by Flow Cytometry
title_full Ecological Stability Properties of Microbial Communities Assessed by Flow Cytometry
title_fullStr Ecological Stability Properties of Microbial Communities Assessed by Flow Cytometry
title_full_unstemmed Ecological Stability Properties of Microbial Communities Assessed by Flow Cytometry
title_short Ecological Stability Properties of Microbial Communities Assessed by Flow Cytometry
title_sort ecological stability properties of microbial communities assessed by flow cytometry
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5770544/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29359193
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00564-17
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