Litcius/Paper detail

Application of ecological and evolutionary theory to microbiome community dynamics across systems

James E. McDonald, Julian R. Marchesi, Britt Koskella

2020Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A fundamental aim of microbiome research is to understand the factors that influence the assembly and stability of host-associated microbiomes, and their impact on host phenotype, ecology and evolution. However, ecological and evolutionary theories applied to predict microbiome community dynamics are largely based on macroorganisms and lack microbiome-centric hypotheses that account for unique features of the microbiome. This special feature sets out to drive advancements in the application of eco-evolutionary theory to microbiome community dynamics through the development of microbiome-specific theoretical and conceptual frameworks across plant, human and non-human animal systems. The feature comprises 11 research and review articles that address: (i) the effects of the microbiome on host phenotype, ecology and evolution; (ii) the application and development of ecological and evolutionary theories to investigate microbiome assembly, diversity and stability across broad taxonomic scales; and (iii) general principles that underlie microbiome diversity and dynamics. This cross-disciplinary synthesis of theoretical, conceptual, methodological and analytical approaches to characterizing host-microbiome ecology and evolution across systems addresses key research gaps in the field of microbiome research and highlights future research priorities.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeEcologyBiologyHuman microbiomeEvolutionary dynamicsHost (biology)Evolutionary ecologyEvolutionary biologyBioinformaticsSociologyPopulationDemographyGut microbiota and healthMicrobial Community Ecology and Physiology