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Type IV Pilus Shapes a ‘Bubble-Burst’ Pattern Opposing Spatial Intermixing of Two Interacting Bacterial Populations

Microbes are social organisms that commonly live in sessile biofilms. Spatial patterns of populations within biofilms can be important determinants of community-level properties. Spatial intermixing emerging from microbial interaction is one of the best-studied characteristics of spatial patterns. T...

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Autores principales: Wang, Miaoxiao, Chen, Xiaoli, Ma, Yinyin, Tang, Yue-Qin, Johnson, David R., Nie, Yong, Wu, Xiao-Lei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8849093/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35171019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01944-21
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author Wang, Miaoxiao
Chen, Xiaoli
Ma, Yinyin
Tang, Yue-Qin
Johnson, David R.
Nie, Yong
Wu, Xiao-Lei
author_facet Wang, Miaoxiao
Chen, Xiaoli
Ma, Yinyin
Tang, Yue-Qin
Johnson, David R.
Nie, Yong
Wu, Xiao-Lei
author_sort Wang, Miaoxiao
collection PubMed
description Microbes are social organisms that commonly live in sessile biofilms. Spatial patterns of populations within biofilms can be important determinants of community-level properties. Spatial intermixing emerging from microbial interaction is one of the best-studied characteristics of spatial patterns. The specific levels of spatial intermixing critically contribute to how the dynamics and functioning of such communities are governed. However, the precise factors that determine spatial patterns and intermixing remain unclear. Here, we investigated the spatial patterning and intermixing of an engineered synthetic consortium composed of two mutualistic Pseudomonas stutzeri strains that degrade salicylate via metabolic cross-feeding. We found that the consortium self-organizes across space to form a previously unreported spatial pattern (here referred to as a ‘bubble-burst’ pattern) that exhibits a low level of intermixing. Interestingly, when the genes encoding type IV pili were deleted from both strains, a highly intermixed spatial pattern developed and increased the productivity of the entire community. The intermixed pattern was maintained in a robust manner across a wide range of initial ratios between the two strains. Our findings show that the type IV pilus plays a role in mitigating spatial intermixing of different populations in surface-attached microbial communities, with consequences for governing community-level properties. These insights provide tangible clues for the engineering of synthetic microbial systems that perform highly in spatially structured environments. IMPORTANCE When growing on surfaces, multispecies microbial communities form biofilms that exhibit intriguing spatial patterns. These patterns can significantly affect the overall properties of the community, enabling otherwise impermissible metabolic functions to occur as well as driving the evolutionary and ecological processes acting on communities. The development of these patterns is affected by several drivers, including cell-cell interactions, nutrient levels, density of founding cells, and surface properties. The type IV pilus is commonly found to mediate surface-associated behaviors of microorganisms, but its role on pattern formation within microbial communities is unclear. Here, we report that in a cross-feeding consortium, the type IV pilus affects the spatial intermixing of interacting populations involved in pattern formation and ultimately influences overall community productivity and robustness. This novel insight assists our understanding of the ecological processes of surface-attached microbial communities and suggests a potential strategy for engineering high-performance synthetic microbial communities.
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spelling pubmed-88490932022-02-17 Type IV Pilus Shapes a ‘Bubble-Burst’ Pattern Opposing Spatial Intermixing of Two Interacting Bacterial Populations Wang, Miaoxiao Chen, Xiaoli Ma, Yinyin Tang, Yue-Qin Johnson, David R. Nie, Yong Wu, Xiao-Lei Microbiol Spectr Observation Microbes are social organisms that commonly live in sessile biofilms. Spatial patterns of populations within biofilms can be important determinants of community-level properties. Spatial intermixing emerging from microbial interaction is one of the best-studied characteristics of spatial patterns. The specific levels of spatial intermixing critically contribute to how the dynamics and functioning of such communities are governed. However, the precise factors that determine spatial patterns and intermixing remain unclear. Here, we investigated the spatial patterning and intermixing of an engineered synthetic consortium composed of two mutualistic Pseudomonas stutzeri strains that degrade salicylate via metabolic cross-feeding. We found that the consortium self-organizes across space to form a previously unreported spatial pattern (here referred to as a ‘bubble-burst’ pattern) that exhibits a low level of intermixing. Interestingly, when the genes encoding type IV pili were deleted from both strains, a highly intermixed spatial pattern developed and increased the productivity of the entire community. The intermixed pattern was maintained in a robust manner across a wide range of initial ratios between the two strains. Our findings show that the type IV pilus plays a role in mitigating spatial intermixing of different populations in surface-attached microbial communities, with consequences for governing community-level properties. These insights provide tangible clues for the engineering of synthetic microbial systems that perform highly in spatially structured environments. IMPORTANCE When growing on surfaces, multispecies microbial communities form biofilms that exhibit intriguing spatial patterns. These patterns can significantly affect the overall properties of the community, enabling otherwise impermissible metabolic functions to occur as well as driving the evolutionary and ecological processes acting on communities. The development of these patterns is affected by several drivers, including cell-cell interactions, nutrient levels, density of founding cells, and surface properties. The type IV pilus is commonly found to mediate surface-associated behaviors of microorganisms, but its role on pattern formation within microbial communities is unclear. Here, we report that in a cross-feeding consortium, the type IV pilus affects the spatial intermixing of interacting populations involved in pattern formation and ultimately influences overall community productivity and robustness. This novel insight assists our understanding of the ecological processes of surface-attached microbial communities and suggests a potential strategy for engineering high-performance synthetic microbial communities. American Society for Microbiology 2022-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8849093/ /pubmed/35171019 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01944-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Wang 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 Observation
Wang, Miaoxiao
Chen, Xiaoli
Ma, Yinyin
Tang, Yue-Qin
Johnson, David R.
Nie, Yong
Wu, Xiao-Lei
Type IV Pilus Shapes a ‘Bubble-Burst’ Pattern Opposing Spatial Intermixing of Two Interacting Bacterial Populations
title Type IV Pilus Shapes a ‘Bubble-Burst’ Pattern Opposing Spatial Intermixing of Two Interacting Bacterial Populations
title_full Type IV Pilus Shapes a ‘Bubble-Burst’ Pattern Opposing Spatial Intermixing of Two Interacting Bacterial Populations
title_fullStr Type IV Pilus Shapes a ‘Bubble-Burst’ Pattern Opposing Spatial Intermixing of Two Interacting Bacterial Populations
title_full_unstemmed Type IV Pilus Shapes a ‘Bubble-Burst’ Pattern Opposing Spatial Intermixing of Two Interacting Bacterial Populations
title_short Type IV Pilus Shapes a ‘Bubble-Burst’ Pattern Opposing Spatial Intermixing of Two Interacting Bacterial Populations
title_sort type iv pilus shapes a ‘bubble-burst’ pattern opposing spatial intermixing of two interacting bacterial populations
topic Observation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8849093/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35171019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01944-21
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