Acid stress and cross-feeding provide a dynamic mechanism of microbial coexistence

ORAL

Abstract

Despite the ubiquity of microbial diversity observed across environments, mechanisms of cooperativity that enable species coexistence beyond the classical limit of one-species-per-niche have been elusive. Here we report the observation of a transient but substantial cross-feeding of internal metabolites between two marine bacterial species under acid stress, and further establish through quantitative physiological characterization of the individual strains that this cross-feeding is central to the coexistence of these species in growth-dilution cycles. The coculture self-organizes into a limit cycle in which acid-stressed producers excrete various internal metabolites upon entering growth arrest, enabling the cross-feeders to grow, restore medium pH, and protect the producers from death. These results establish a mechanism in which functional niches are dynamically emergent from self-inhibited growth of a fast-growing species and subsequent resource sharing that allows a slower-growing species to sufficiently grow to enable coexistence.

*This work is supported by the Simons Foundation through the Principles of Microbial Ecosystems (PriME) collaboration

Publication: Kapil Amarnath, Avaneesh V. Narla, Sammy Pontrelli, Jiajia Dong, Tolga Caglar, Brian R. Taylor, Julia Schwartzman, Uwe Sauer, Otto X. Cordero, Terence Hwa
bioRxiv 2021.06.24.449802; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.06.24.449802

Presenters

  • Kapil Amarnath

    • University of California, San Diego

Authors

  • Avaneesh V Narla

    • University of California, San Diego
  • Kapil Amarnath

    • University of California, San Diego
  • Sammy Pontrelli

    • ETH Zürich
  • Jiajia Dong

    • Bucknell University
  • Tolga Caglar

    • University of California, San Diego
  • Brian R Taylor

    • University of California San Diego
    • University of California, San Diego
  • Julia Schwartzman

    • MIT
  • Uwe Sauer

    • ETH Zurich
  • Otto X Cordero

    • MIT
  • Terence T Hwa

    • University of California, San Diego
    • UCSD