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Published December 19, 2022 | Published
Journal Article Open

The contrasting roles of nitric oxide drive microbial community organization as a function of oxygen presence

Abstract

Microbial assemblages are omnipresent in the biosphere, forming communities on the surfaces of roots and rocks and within living tissues. These communities can exhibit strikingly beautiful compositional structures, with certain members reproducibly occupying particular spatiotemporal microniches. Despite this reproducibility, we lack the ability to explain these spatial patterns. We hypothesize that certain spatial patterns in microbial communities may be explained by the exchange of redox-active metabolites whose biological function is sensitive to microenvironmental gradients. To test this, we developed a simple community consisting of synthetic Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains with a partitioned denitrification pathway: a strict consumer and strict producer of nitric oxide (NO), a key pathway intermediate. Because NO can be both toxic or beneficial depending on the amount of oxygen present, this system provided an opportunity to investigate whether dynamic oxygen gradients can tune metabolic cross-feeding and fitness outcomes in a predictable fashion. Using a combination of genetic analysis, controlled growth environments, and imaging, we show that oxygen availability dictates whether NO cross-feeding is deleterious or mutually beneficial and that this organizing principle maps to the microscale. More generally, this work underscores the importance of considering the double-edged and microenvironmentally tuned roles redox-active metabolites can play in shaping microbial communities.

Additional Information

The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (R01HL152190 to D.K.N.) and the National Science Foundation Graduate Student Fellowships Program (to S.A.W.). We would like to thank the current and past Newman Lab members for feedback and discussions. Specifically, we thank Drs. Darcy McRose and Avi Flamholz for manuscript review; Dr. Melanie Spero for molecular technique instruction; Drs. Reinaldo Alcade, Georgia Squyres, Zachary Lonergan for fruitful discussion and assay troubleshooting; and Dr. Michael Piacentino for help with programming and encouragement. Some of the imaging was performed in the Biological Imaging Facility of the California Institute of Technology with the support of the Caltech Beckman Institute and the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation.

Copyright and License

© 2022 Elsevier Under an Elsevier user license.

Contributions

S.A.W. and D.K.N. contributed to study conceptualization, data interpretation, and writing – review and editing. S.A.W. developed methodology, performed experiments, data curation, and original manuscript draft.

Conflict of Interest

D.K.N. is a member of the Current Biology Editorial Board.

Additional Information

One or more of the authors of this paper self-identifies as a member of the LGBTQIA+ community. We support inclusive, diverse, and equitable conduct of research.

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Additional details

Created:
December 20, 2023
Modified:
January 9, 2024