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Dilution-to-Stimulation/Extinction Method: a Combination Enrichment Strategy To Develop a Minimal and Versatile Lignocellulolytic Bacterial Consortium

The engineering of complex communities can be a successful path to understand the ecology of microbial systems and improve biotechnological processes. Here, we developed a strategy to assemble a minimal and effective lignocellulolytic microbial consortium (MELMC) using a sequential combination of di...

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Autores principales: Díaz-García, Laura, Huang, Sixing, Spröer, Cathrin, Sierra-Ramírez, Rocío, Bunk, Boyke, Overmann, Jörg, Jiménez, Diego Javier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7783344/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33127812
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02427-20
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author Díaz-García, Laura
Huang, Sixing
Spröer, Cathrin
Sierra-Ramírez, Rocío
Bunk, Boyke
Overmann, Jörg
Jiménez, Diego Javier
author_facet Díaz-García, Laura
Huang, Sixing
Spröer, Cathrin
Sierra-Ramírez, Rocío
Bunk, Boyke
Overmann, Jörg
Jiménez, Diego Javier
author_sort Díaz-García, Laura
collection PubMed
description The engineering of complex communities can be a successful path to understand the ecology of microbial systems and improve biotechnological processes. Here, we developed a strategy to assemble a minimal and effective lignocellulolytic microbial consortium (MELMC) using a sequential combination of dilution-to-stimulation and dilution-to-extinction approaches. The consortium was retrieved from Andean forest soil and selected through incubation in liquid medium with a mixture of three types of agricultural plant residues. After the dilution-to-stimulation phase, approximately 50 bacterial sequence types, mostly belonging to the Sphingobacteriaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonadaceae, and Paenibacillaceae, were significantly enriched. The dilution-to-extinction method demonstrated that only eight of the bacterial sequence types were necessary to maintain microbial growth and plant biomass consumption. After subsequent stabilization, only two bacterial species (Pseudomonas sp. and Paenibacillus sp.) became highly abundant (>99%) within the MELMC, indicating that these are the key players in degradation. Differences in the composition of bacterial communities between biological replicates indicated that selection, sampling, and/or priority effects could shape the consortium structure. The MELMC can degrade up to ∼13% of corn stover, consuming mostly its (hemi)cellulosic fraction. Tests with chromogenic substrates showed that the MELMC secretes an array of endoenzymes able to degrade xylan, arabinoxylan, carboxymethyl cellulose, and wheat straw. Additionally, the metagenomic profile inferred from the phylogenetic composition along with an analysis of carbohydrate-active enzymes of 20 bacterial genomes support the potential of the MELMC to deconstruct plant polysaccharides. This capacity was mainly attributed to the presence of Paenibacillus sp. IMPORTANCE The significance of our study mainly lies in the development of a combined top-down enrichment strategy (i.e., dilution to stimulation coupled to dilution to extinction) to build a minimal and versatile lignocellulolytic microbial consortium. We demonstrated that mainly two selectively enriched bacterial species (Pseudomonas sp. and Paenibacillus sp.) are required to drive the effective degradation of plant polymers. Our findings can guide the design of a synthetic bacterial consortium that could improve saccharification (i.e., the release of sugars from agricultural plant residues) processes in biorefineries. In addition, they can help to expand our ecological understanding of plant biomass degradation in enriched bacterial systems.
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spelling pubmed-77833442021-01-29 Dilution-to-Stimulation/Extinction Method: a Combination Enrichment Strategy To Develop a Minimal and Versatile Lignocellulolytic Bacterial Consortium Díaz-García, Laura Huang, Sixing Spröer, Cathrin Sierra-Ramírez, Rocío Bunk, Boyke Overmann, Jörg Jiménez, Diego Javier Appl Environ Microbiol Microbial Ecology The engineering of complex communities can be a successful path to understand the ecology of microbial systems and improve biotechnological processes. Here, we developed a strategy to assemble a minimal and effective lignocellulolytic microbial consortium (MELMC) using a sequential combination of dilution-to-stimulation and dilution-to-extinction approaches. The consortium was retrieved from Andean forest soil and selected through incubation in liquid medium with a mixture of three types of agricultural plant residues. After the dilution-to-stimulation phase, approximately 50 bacterial sequence types, mostly belonging to the Sphingobacteriaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonadaceae, and Paenibacillaceae, were significantly enriched. The dilution-to-extinction method demonstrated that only eight of the bacterial sequence types were necessary to maintain microbial growth and plant biomass consumption. After subsequent stabilization, only two bacterial species (Pseudomonas sp. and Paenibacillus sp.) became highly abundant (>99%) within the MELMC, indicating that these are the key players in degradation. Differences in the composition of bacterial communities between biological replicates indicated that selection, sampling, and/or priority effects could shape the consortium structure. The MELMC can degrade up to ∼13% of corn stover, consuming mostly its (hemi)cellulosic fraction. Tests with chromogenic substrates showed that the MELMC secretes an array of endoenzymes able to degrade xylan, arabinoxylan, carboxymethyl cellulose, and wheat straw. Additionally, the metagenomic profile inferred from the phylogenetic composition along with an analysis of carbohydrate-active enzymes of 20 bacterial genomes support the potential of the MELMC to deconstruct plant polysaccharides. This capacity was mainly attributed to the presence of Paenibacillus sp. IMPORTANCE The significance of our study mainly lies in the development of a combined top-down enrichment strategy (i.e., dilution to stimulation coupled to dilution to extinction) to build a minimal and versatile lignocellulolytic microbial consortium. We demonstrated that mainly two selectively enriched bacterial species (Pseudomonas sp. and Paenibacillus sp.) are required to drive the effective degradation of plant polymers. Our findings can guide the design of a synthetic bacterial consortium that could improve saccharification (i.e., the release of sugars from agricultural plant residues) processes in biorefineries. In addition, they can help to expand our ecological understanding of plant biomass degradation in enriched bacterial systems. American Society for Microbiology 2021-01-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7783344/ /pubmed/33127812 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02427-20 Text en Copyright © 2021 Díaz-García 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 Microbial Ecology
Díaz-García, Laura
Huang, Sixing
Spröer, Cathrin
Sierra-Ramírez, Rocío
Bunk, Boyke
Overmann, Jörg
Jiménez, Diego Javier
Dilution-to-Stimulation/Extinction Method: a Combination Enrichment Strategy To Develop a Minimal and Versatile Lignocellulolytic Bacterial Consortium
title Dilution-to-Stimulation/Extinction Method: a Combination Enrichment Strategy To Develop a Minimal and Versatile Lignocellulolytic Bacterial Consortium
title_full Dilution-to-Stimulation/Extinction Method: a Combination Enrichment Strategy To Develop a Minimal and Versatile Lignocellulolytic Bacterial Consortium
title_fullStr Dilution-to-Stimulation/Extinction Method: a Combination Enrichment Strategy To Develop a Minimal and Versatile Lignocellulolytic Bacterial Consortium
title_full_unstemmed Dilution-to-Stimulation/Extinction Method: a Combination Enrichment Strategy To Develop a Minimal and Versatile Lignocellulolytic Bacterial Consortium
title_short Dilution-to-Stimulation/Extinction Method: a Combination Enrichment Strategy To Develop a Minimal and Versatile Lignocellulolytic Bacterial Consortium
title_sort dilution-to-stimulation/extinction method: a combination enrichment strategy to develop a minimal and versatile lignocellulolytic bacterial consortium
topic Microbial Ecology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7783344/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33127812
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02427-20
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