Strain-Level Diversity Impacts Cheese Rind Microbiome Assembly and Function
Brittany A. Niccum, Erik K. Kastman, Nicole Kfoury, Albert Robbat, Benjamin E. Wolfe
Abstract
Our work demonstrated that the specific microbial strains used to construct a microbiome could impact the species composition, perturbation responses, and functional outputs of that system. These findings suggest that 16S rRNA gene taxonomic profiles alone may have limited potential to predict the dynamics of microbial communities because they usually do not capture strain-level diversity. Observations from our synthetic communities also suggest that strain-level diversity has the potential to drive variability in the aesthetics and quality of surface-ripened cheeses.
Topics & Concepts
MicrobiomeStrain (injury)Diversity (politics)Function (biology)BiologyFood scienceEvolutionary biologyGeneticsSociologyAnatomyAnthropologyProbiotics and Fermented FoodsGut microbiota and healthMeat and Animal Product Quality