Abstract

The productivity of a biological community often correlates with its diversity. In the microbial world this phenomenon can sometimes be explained by positive, density-dependent interactions such as cross-feeding and syntrophy. These metabolic interactions help account for the astonishing variety of microbial life and drive many of the biogeochemical cycles without which life as we know it could not exist. While it is difficult to recapitulate experimentally how these interactions evolved among multiple taxa, we can explore in the laboratory how they arise within one. These experiments provide insight into how different bacterial ecotypes evolve and from these, possibly new "species." We have previously shown that in a simple, constant environment a single clone of Escherichia coli can give rise to a consortium of genetically and phenotypically differentiated strains, in effect, a set of ecotypes, that coexist by cross-feeding. We marked these different ecotypes and their shared ancestor by integrating fluorescent protein into their genomes and then used flow cytometry to show that each evolved strain is more fit than the shared ancestor, that pairs of evolved strains are fitter still, and that the entire consortium is the fittest of all. We further demonstrate that the rank order of fitness values agrees with estimates of yield, indicating that an experimentally evolved consortium more efficiently converts primary and secondary resources to offspring than its ancestor or any member acting in isolation.IMPORTANCE Polymicrobial consortia occur in both environmental and clinical settings. In many cases, diversity and productivity correlate in these consortia, especially when sustained by positive, density-dependent interactions. However, the evolutionary history of such entities is typically obscure, making it difficult to establish the relative fitness of consortium partners and to use those data to illuminate the diversity-productivity relationship. Here, we dissect an Escherichia coli consortium that evolved under continuous glucose limitation in the laboratory from a single common ancestor. We show that a partnership consisting of cross-feeding ecotypes is better able to secure primary and secondary resources and to convert those resources to offspring than the ancestral clone. Such interactions may be a prelude to a special form of syntrophy and are likely determinants of microbial community structure in nature, including those having clinical significance such as chronic infections.

Highlights

  • The productivity of a biological community often correlates with its diversity

  • Polymorphism took the form of evolved strains (CV101, CV103, and CV116) that differed in their colony size and antibiotic resistance, as well as in their capacity to scavenge limiting glucose (Table 1)

  • Because these strain-specific physiological differences are associated with genetic differences across scores of loci [8], E1, E3, and E6 should be regarded as ecotypes that have undergone adaptive diversification [48]

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Summary

Introduction

The productivity of a biological community often correlates with its diversity. In the microbial world this phenomenon can sometimes be explained by positive, density-dependent interactions such as cross-feeding and syntrophy. While it is difficult to recapitulate experimentally how these interactions evolved among multiple taxa, we can explore in the laboratory how they arise within one These experiments provide insight into how different bacterial ecotypes evolve and from these, possibly new “species.” We have previously shown that in a simple, constant environment a single clone of Escherichia coli can give rise to a consortium of genetically and phenotypically differentiated strains, in effect, a set of ecotypes, that coexist by cross-feeding. Adaptive lineages that coexist owing to frequency-dependent selection are more likely to undergo evolutionary diversification than those that are not [14, 15] Over successive generations such lineages may become so genetically and physiologically differentiated as to attain the status of ecotypes [16], especially when barriers to horizontal gene transfer arise between them. It is an open question whether such ecotypes constitute nascent bacterial species, sensu Cohan [17], that in time go on to form, for example, stable syntrophic associations

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