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Solutions in microbiome engineering: prioritizing barriers to organism establishment.

Michaeline B N AlbrightStilianos LoucaDaniel E WinklerKelli L FeeserSarah-Jane HaigKatrine L WhitesonJoanne B EmersonJohn Dunbar
Published in: The ISME journal (2021)
Microbiome engineering is increasingly being employed as a solution to challenges in health, agriculture, and climate. Often manipulation involves inoculation of new microbes designed to improve function into a preexisting microbial community. Despite, increased efforts in microbiome engineering inoculants frequently fail to establish and/or confer long-lasting modifications on ecosystem function. We posit that one underlying cause of these shortfalls is the failure to consider barriers to organism establishment. This is a key challenge and focus of macroecology research, specifically invasion biology and restoration ecology. We adopt a framework from invasion biology that summarizes establishment barriers in three categories: (1) propagule pressure, (2) environmental filtering, and (3) biotic interactions factors. We suggest that biotic interactions is the most neglected factor in microbiome engineering research, and we recommend a number of actions to accelerate engineering solutions.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • climate change
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • human health
  • cell migration
  • mental health
  • antibiotic resistance genes
  • health information
  • wastewater treatment
  • health promotion
  • life cycle