Diversity in the utilization of different molecular classes of dissolved organic matter by heterotrophic marine bacteria.
Shira GivatiElena ForchielliDikla AharonovichNoga BarakOsnat WeissbergNatalia BelkinEyal RahavDaniel SegrèDaniel SherPublished in: Applied and environmental microbiology (2024)
A major goal of microbial ecology is to predict the dynamics of natural communities based on the identity of the organisms, their physiological traits, and their genomes. Our results show that several clades of heterotrophic bacteria each grow in response to one or more specific classes of organic matter. For some clades, but not others, growth in a complex community is similar to that of isolated strains in laboratory monoculture. Additionally, by measuring how the entire community responds to various classes of organic matter, we show that these results are ecologically relevant, and propose that some of these resources are utilized through common uptake pathways. Tracing the path between different resources to the specific microbes that utilize them, and identifying commonalities and differences between different natural communities and between them and lab cultures, is an important step toward understanding microbial community dynamics and predicting how communities will respond to perturbations.