Community composition drives siderophore dynamics in multispecies bacterial communities.
Citation:
Siobhán O'Brien, Chris Culbert, Timothy G. Barraclough, Community composition drives siderophore dynamics in multispecies bacterial communities., BMC Ecology and Evolution, 23, 45, 2023Download Item:

Abstract:
Background Intraspecific public goods are commonly shared within microbial populations, where the benefits of
public goods are largely limited to closely related conspecifics. One example is the production of iron-scavenging
siderophores that deliver iron to cells via specific cell envelope receptor and transport systems. Intraspecific social
exploitation of siderophore producers is common, since non-producers avoid the costs of production but retain the
cell envelope machinery for siderophore uptake. However, little is known about how interactions between species
(i.e., interspecific interactions) can shape intraspecific public goods exploitation. Here, we predicted that strong
competition for iron between species in diverse communities will increase costs of siderophore cooperation, and
hence drive intraspecific exploitation. We examined how increasing microbial community species diversity shapes
intraspecific social dynamics by monitoring the growth of siderophore producers and non-producers of the plantgrowth promoting bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens, embedded within tree-hole microbial communities ranging
from 2 to 15 species.
Results We find, contrary to our prediction, that siderophore production is favoured at higher levels of community
species richness, driven by increased likelihood of encountering key species that reduce the growth of siderophore
non-producing (but not producing) strains of P. fluorescens.
Conclusions Our results suggest that maintaining a diverse soil microbiota could partly contribute to the
maintenance of siderophore production in natural communities.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/obries79Description:
PUBLISHED
Author: O'Brien, Siobhan
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections:
Series/Report no:
BMC Ecology and Evolution;23;
45;
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Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Smart & Sustainable PlanetDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-023-02152-8Licences: