Milk kefir grains with jar of kefir in background

New research from the 探花直播 of Cambridge and European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) shows how cooperation among bacterial species allows them to thrive as a community.

If you look at the whole world of microbiomes, cooperation is key to their structure and function.

Kiran Patil

探花直播 are published today in the journal Nature Microbiology.

探花直播study used kefir as a model to study metabolic interactions within microbial communities. It is easy to grow, and consists of around 40 different species - providing a 鈥楪oldilocks zone鈥 of complexity that is not too small yet not too unwieldy to study in detail. Kefir is composed of 鈥榞rains鈥 - resembling small pieces of cauliflower - that have fermented in milk to produce a probiotic drink composed of bacteria and yeasts.

探花直播researchers were surprised to discover that the dominant species of Lactobacillus bacteria found in kefir grains cannot survive on their own in milk. However, the different species work together, feeding on each other鈥檚 metabolites in the kefir culture to support each other.听

鈥 探花直播kefir grain acts as a 鈥榖ase camp鈥 for the kefir community, from which microbes colonise the milk in a complex, yet organised and cooperative manner,鈥 said Dr Kiran Patil, Director of Research at the 探花直播 of Cambridge鈥檚 MRC Toxicology Unit, group leader at EMBL, and senior author of the study.听

探花直播researchers combined a variety of state-of-the-art methods including metabolomics (studying metabolites鈥 chemical processes), transcriptomics (studying the genome-produced RNA transcripts), and mathematical modelling. This revealed not only key molecular interaction agents like amino acids, but also the contrasting species dynamics between the grains and the milk.

While scientists know that microorganisms often live in communities and depend on their fellow community members for survival, there was previously very little understanding of how this works. Lab models have historically been limited to two or three different microbial species.听

鈥淜efir microbial communities have many member species, with individual growth patterns that adapt to their current environment. This means fast- and slow-growing species and some that alter their speed according to nutrient availability,鈥 said Sonja Blasche, a postdoc in the Patil group at EMBL and joint first author of the paper.听

Kefir is one of the world鈥檚 oldest fermented foods and has many purported health benefits, including improving digestion and lowering blood pressure and blood glucose levels.听

This phenomenon of microbial cooperation is not limited to kefir. In another from Patil鈥檚 group, published today in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution, scientists combined data from thousands of microbial communities across the globe -听from soil to the human gut -听to understand similar cooperative relationships.听

Advanced metabolic modelling showed that the co-occurring groups of bacteria are either highly competitive or highly cooperative. This stark polarisation has not been observed before and sheds light on evolutionary processes that shape microbial ecosystems. While both competitive and cooperative communities are prevalent, the cooperators seem to be more successful: they are more abundant and occupy a more diverse range of habitats.听听

鈥淲e see this phenomenon in kefir, and then we see it鈥檚 not limited to kefir,鈥 said Patil. 鈥淚f you look at the whole world of microbiomes, cooperation is also key to their structure and function.鈥

References
Patil, K.R. 鈥.鈥 Nature Microbiology, Jan 2021. DOI: 10.1038/s41564-020-00816-5.

Patil, K.R. 鈥.鈥 Nature Ecology & Evolution, Jan 2021. DOI: 10.1038/s41559-020-01353-4.

Adapted from a press release by EMBL.



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