Frontiers in Microbiology (Mar 2024)

High synthetic cost-amino acids reduce member interactions of acetate-degrading methanogenic microbial community

  • Jian Yao,
  • Jian Yao,
  • Quan Zhang,
  • Min Gou,
  • Min Gou,
  • Yue-Qin Tang,
  • Yue-Qin Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2024.1368215
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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IntroductionThe cooperation among members of microbial communities based on the exchange of public goods such as 20 protein amino acids (AAs) has attracted widespread attention. However, little is known about how AAs availability affects interactions among members of complex microbial communities and the structure and function of a community.MethodsTo investigate this question, trace amounts of AAs combinations with different synthetic costs (low-cost, medium-cost, high-cost, and all 20 AAs) were supplemented separately to acetate-degrading thermophilic methanogenic reactors, and the differences in microbial community structure and co-occurring networks of main members were compared to a control reactor without AA supplementation.ResultsThe structure of the microbial community and the interaction of community members were influenced by AAs supplementation and the AAs with different synthetic costs had different impacts. The number of nodes, links, positive links, and the average degree of nodes in the co-occurrence network of the microbial communities with AAs supplementation was significantly lower than that of the control without AAs supplementation, especially for all 20 AAs supplementation followed by the medium- and high-cost AAs supplementation. The average proportion of positive interactions of microbial members in the systems supplemented with low-cost, medium-cost, high-cost, all AAs, and the control group were 0.42, 0.38, 0.15, 0.4, and 0.45, respectively. In addition, the ecological functions of community members possibly changed with the supplementation of different cost AAs.DiscussionThese findings highlight the effects of AAs availability on the interactions among members of complex microbial communities, as well as on community function.

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