Litcius/Paper detail

Competitive Exclusion and Metabolic Dependency among Microorganisms Structure the Cellulose Economy of an Agricultural Soil

Roland C. Wilhelm, Charles Pepe‐Ranney, Pamela Weisenhorn, Mary Lipton, Daniel H. Buckley

2021mBio52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Our study reveals the ecogenomic traits of microorganisms participating in the cellulose economy of soil. We identified three major categories of participants in this economy: (i) independent primary degraders, (ii) interdependent primary degraders, and (iii) secondary consumers (mutualists, opportunists, and parasites). Trade-offs between independent primary degraders, whose adaptations favor antagonism and competitive exclusion, and interdependent and secondary degraders, whose adaptations favor complex interspecies interactions, are expected to affect the fate of microbially processed carbon in soil. Our findings provide useful insights into the ecological relationships that govern one of the planet's most abundant resources of organic carbon. Furthermore, we demonstrate a novel gradient-resolved approach for stable isotope probing, which provides a cultivation-independent, genome-centric perspective into soil microbial processes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyActinobacteriaDecomposerCelluloseMetagenomicsRhodococcusEcologyBacteriaBiochemistryEcosystem16S ribosomal RNAGeneGeneticsMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyMycorrhizal Fungi and Plant InteractionsGut microbiota and health