High biodiversity in a benzene-degrading nitrate-reducing culture is sustained by a few primary consumers

Open Access
Authors
  • C. Melkonian
  • L. Fillinger
  • S. Atashgahi
  • U.N. da Rocha
  • E. Kuiper
  • B. Olivier
  • M. Braster
  • W. Gottstein
  • R. Helmus ORCID logo
  • J.R. Parsons ORCID logo
  • H. Smidt
  • M. van der Waals
  • J. Gerritse
  • B.W. Brandt
  • W.F.M. Röling
  • D. Molenaar
  • R.J.M. van Spanning
Publication date 05-05-2021
Journal Communications biology
Article number 530
Volume | Issue number 4
Number of pages 12
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
  • Faculty of Dentistry (ACTA)
Abstract

A key question in microbial ecology is what the driving forces behind the persistence of large biodiversity in natural environments are. We studied a microbial community with more than 100 different types of species which evolved in a 15-years old bioreactor with benzene as the main carbon and energy source and nitrate as the electron acceptor. Using genome-centric metagenomics plus metatranscriptomics, we demonstrate that most of the community members likely feed on metabolic left-overs or on necromass while only a few of them, from families Rhodocyclaceae and Peptococcaceae, are candidates to degrade benzene. We verify with an additional succession experiment using metabolomics and metabarcoding that these few community members are the actual drivers of benzene degradation. As such, we hypothesize that high species richness is maintained and the complexity of a natural community is stabilized in a controlled environment by the interdependencies between the few benzene degraders and the rest of the community members, ultimately resulting in a food web with different trophic levels.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary materials. - This article has been updated with an author correction
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-021-01948-y
Other links https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-021-02311-x
Downloads
s42003-021-01948-y (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
Permalink to this page
Back