structure and evolution of streptomyces interaction networks in soil and in silico结构和链霉菌属的进化在土壤和硅片交互网络.pdf
文本预览下载声明
Structure and Evolution of Streptomyces Interaction
Networks in Soil and In Silico
Kalin Vetsigian, Rishi Jajoo, Roy Kishony*
Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America
Abstract
Soil grains harbor an astonishing diversity of Streptomyces strains producing diverse secondary metabolites. However, it is
not understood how this genotypic and chemical diversity is ecologically maintained. While secondary metabolites are
known to mediate signaling and warfare among strains, no systematic measurement of the resulting interaction networks
has been available. We developed a high-throughput platform to measure all pairwise interactions among 64 Streptomyces
strains isolated from several individual grains of soil. We acquired more than 10,000 time-lapse movies of colony
development of each isolate on media containing compounds produced by each of the other isolates. We observed a rich
set of such sender-receiver interactions, including inhibition and promotion of growth and aerial mycelium formation. The
probability that two random isolates interact is balanced; it is neither close to zero nor one. The interactions are not random:
the distribution of the number of interactions per sender is bimodal and there is enrichment for reciprocity—if strain A
inhibits or promotes B, it is likely that B also inhibits or promotes A. Such reciprocity is further enriched in strains derived
from the same soil grain, suggesting that it may be a property of coexisting communities. Interactions appear to evolve
rapidly: isolates with identical 16S rRNA sequences can have very different interaction patterns. A simple eco-evolutionary
model of bacteria interacting through antibiotic production shows how fast evolution of production and resistance can lead
to the observed statistical prope
显示全部