Frontiers in Microbiology (Apr 2023)

Facilitative interaction networks in experimental microbial community dynamics

  • Hiroaki Fujita,
  • Masayuki Ushio,
  • Kenta Suzuki,
  • Masato S. Abe,
  • Masato Yamamichi,
  • Masato Yamamichi,
  • Yusuke Okazaki,
  • Alberto Canarini,
  • Ibuki Hayashi,
  • Keitaro Fukushima,
  • Shinji Fukuda,
  • Shinji Fukuda,
  • Shinji Fukuda,
  • Shinji Fukuda,
  • E. Toby Kiers,
  • Hirokazu Toju

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1153952
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Facilitative interactions between microbial species are ubiquitous in various types of ecosystems on the Earth. Therefore, inferring how entangled webs of interspecific interactions shift through time in microbial ecosystems is an essential step for understanding ecological processes driving microbiome dynamics. By compiling shotgun metagenomic sequencing data of an experimental microbial community, we examined how the architectural features of facilitative interaction networks could change through time. A metabolic modeling approach for estimating dependence between microbial genomes (species) allowed us to infer the network structure of potential facilitative interactions at 13 time points through the 110-day monitoring of experimental microbiomes. We then found that positive feedback loops, which were theoretically predicted to promote cascade breakdown of ecological communities, existed within the inferred networks of metabolic interactions prior to the drastic community-compositional shift observed in the microbiome time-series. We further applied “directed-graph” analyses to pinpoint potential keystone species located at the “upper stream” positions of such feedback loops. These analyses on facilitative interactions will help us understand key mechanisms causing catastrophic shifts in microbial community structure.

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