• Building models to predict interactions

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Friday, July 07, 2023 22:30:28
    Building models to predict interactions in plant microbiomes

    Date:
    July 7, 2023
    Source:
    ETH Zurich
    Summary:
    Microbiomes play a key role for plant health and could
    make agriculture more sustainable -- but the principles
    behind the assembly of their communities have remained largely
    unknown. Researchers have shown how bacteria can compete for food,
    but also cooperate thanks to differences in metabolism -- resulting
    in stably structured communities. Their models can accurately
    predict these interactions and can help to design microbiomes for
    specific applications in the future.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Plants, animals, and humans are all home to numerous microorganisms such
    as bacteria and fungi. These form complex communities that have a profound impact on the health of their host. One notable microbiome is that of the
    human gut, which helps digest our food and protect us against pathogens.

    Plants are also host to microbial communities on their roots and
    leaves. These communities can promote growth and keep off harmful
    bacteria. Plant microbiomes therefore have the potential to make
    agriculture more sustainable. However, we currently only have a
    rudimentary understanding of the interspecies interactions that shape
    these microbial communities.

    Why is it that these communities tend to be populated only by certain
    kinds of microbes and not others? "We already knew that leaf microbiomes weren't just some random collections of microbes," says Julia Vorholt, Professor of Microbiology at ETH Zurich. "But the rules that determine how these communities form and what mechanisms shape their makeup remained to
    be found." Now, a team of researchers led by Vorholt has identified just
    such an organising principle for the bacteria that live on the leaves
    of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana(thale cress). The researchers
    have developed a set of models that use the nutrient preferences and
    metabolic abilities of individual bacterial strains to predict how these
    leaf surface microbes compete or cooperate with each other, thereby
    helping us better understand the nature of the resulting microbiome.

    The research team's study, which was carried out in collaboration
    with colleagues at EPFL, has been published in the latest issue of the
    journal Science.

    Resource competition leads to distinct interactions As part of a previous
    work, Vorholt's group had already shown that the microbial communities
    found on plant leaves were remarkably similar. "The consistent composition
    of these communities points to an underlying mechanism that controls
    how the leaf microbiome is created," Vorholt says.

    Martin Scha"fer, a postdoc in Vorholt's group and co-lead author on
    the study, explains that "since all bacteria ultimately depend on
    organic molecules as food, we asked whether we could predict the way
    they interact by knowing which food molecules they can metabolise."
    Alan Pacheco, also co-lead author, adds: "in a competitive environment,
    food niches could lead to stable coexistence and collaboration, with
    the microbes interacting for mutual advantage by exchanging resources."
    The guiding question posed by Vorholt and her team is: Can the use the metabolic capabilities of different bacteria to understand how the leaf microbiome takes shape? Carbon profiles reveal resource competition
    To answer this question, the researchers began by testing the ability
    of more than 200 representative strains of bacteria from Arabidopsis thalianaleaves to grow using 45 different carbon sources. Using these
    carbon profiles, they determined that there was extensive overlap between
    the strains' food niches.

    This indicates that there is fierce competition for resources.

    The researchers then used these carbon profiles to build a set of reliable metabolic models for all bacterial strains, and simulated interactions
    between more than 17,500 pairs of bacteria. Consistent with the extensive overlap in food niches, the simulations showed a marked dominance of
    negative interactions: when competition causes the population of at
    least one of the two strains to decrease.

    Sidestepping competition through cooperation Despite this prevalence of competition, the metabolic models also predicted positive interactions. A closer analysis revealed that these cooperative interactions can be
    traced back to the exchange of organic and amino acids. The study's
    authors carried out plant experiments to test the models' predictions
    and were able to confirm them to an accuracy of 89 percent.

    The accuracy of the models came as a surprise even to the researchers themselves: "The high degree of reliability suggests that our initial assumptions about the importance of metabolic characteristics were
    correct," Pacheco says.

    Harnessing microbiomes for application "What's great about our models is
    that they also work in reverse," Vorholt says, "in that they can be used
    to identify mechanisms that trigger certain interaction patterns." This
    paves the way for targeted microbiome design, which is a key prerequisite
    for downstream applications in agriculture.

    Currently, seed companies and agricultural chemical producers use
    a process of trial and error to search for microbes that sustainably
    support crop protection. The team's findings are therefore relevant not
    only for fundamental research, but also for applications in microbiome
    design for agriculture.

    Vorholt is Co-Director of the Swiss National Centre of Competence
    in Research (NCCR) Microbiomes. Her team's current study furthers the
    research by a network of 20 groups, whose aim is to understand microbiomes
    -- from plants to humans - - so that their vast potential for health, agriculture, and environment can be realised.

    This can be achieved by, for example, supplementing unbalanced communities
    with the right microbe, removing certain species, or even treating
    diseases with combinations of bacteria with special functions. Predictive models will play a key role in this goal.

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    provided by ETH_Zurich. Original written by Michael Keller. Note:
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    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Martin Scha"fer, Alan R. Pacheco, Rahel Ku"nzler, Miriam
    Bortfeld-Miller,
    Christopher M. Field, Evangelia Vayena, Vassily Hatzimanikatis,
    Julia A.

    Vorholt. Metabolic interaction models recapitulate leaf microbiota
    ecology. Science, 2023; 381 (6653) DOI: 10.1126/science.adf5121 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230707111638.htm

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