Litcius/Paper detail

Solutions in microbiome engineering: prioritizing barriers to organism establishment

Michaeline Albright, Stilianos Louca, Daniel E. Winkler, Kelli L. Feeser, Sarah–Jane Haig, Katrine Whiteson, Joanne Emerson, John Dunbar

2021The ISME Journal187 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Microbiome engineering is increasingly being employed as a solution to challenges in health, agriculture, and climate. Often manipulation involves inoculation of new microbes designed to improve function into a preexisting microbial community. Despite, increased efforts in microbiome engineering inoculants frequently fail to establish and/or confer long-lasting modifications on ecosystem function. We posit that one underlying cause of these shortfalls is the failure to consider barriers to organism establishment. This is a key challenge and focus of macroecology research, specifically invasion biology and restoration ecology. We adopt a framework from invasion biology that summarizes establishment barriers in three categories: (1) propagule pressure, (2) environmental filtering, and (3) biotic interactions factors. We suggest that biotic interactions is the most neglected factor in microbiome engineering research, and we recommend a number of actions to accelerate engineering solutions.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMicrobiomeOrganismComputational biologyModel organismBioinformaticsGeneticsGeneGut microbiota and healthMicrobial Community Ecology and Physiology