Micro-scale intermixing: a requisite for stable and synergistic co-establishment in a four-species biofilm

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Standard

Micro-scale intermixing : a requisite for stable and synergistic co-establishment in a four-species biofilm. / Liu, Wenzheng; Russel, Jakob; Burmølle, Mette; Sørensen, Søren Johannes; Madsen, Jonas Stenløkke.

I: I S M E Journal, Bind 12, 2018, s. 1940-1951.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Liu, W, Russel, J, Burmølle, M, Sørensen, SJ & Madsen, JS 2018, 'Micro-scale intermixing: a requisite for stable and synergistic co-establishment in a four-species biofilm', I S M E Journal, bind 12, s. 1940-1951. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-018-0112-2

APA

Liu, W., Russel, J., Burmølle, M., Sørensen, S. J., & Madsen, J. S. (2018). Micro-scale intermixing: a requisite for stable and synergistic co-establishment in a four-species biofilm. I S M E Journal, 12, 1940-1951. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-018-0112-2

Vancouver

Liu W, Russel J, Burmølle M, Sørensen SJ, Madsen JS. Micro-scale intermixing: a requisite for stable and synergistic co-establishment in a four-species biofilm. I S M E Journal. 2018;12:1940-1951. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-018-0112-2

Author

Liu, Wenzheng ; Russel, Jakob ; Burmølle, Mette ; Sørensen, Søren Johannes ; Madsen, Jonas Stenløkke. / Micro-scale intermixing : a requisite for stable and synergistic co-establishment in a four-species biofilm. I: I S M E Journal. 2018 ; Bind 12. s. 1940-1951.

Bibtex

@article{e5069368bc7745298e546d5be16a2cab,
title = "Micro-scale intermixing: a requisite for stable and synergistic co-establishment in a four-species biofilm",
abstract = "Microorganisms frequently coexist in complex multispecies communities, where they distribute non-randomly, reflective of the social interactions that occur. It is therefore important to understand how social interactions and local spatial organization influences multispecies biofilm succession. Here the localization of species pairs was analyzed in three dimensions in a reproducible four-species biofilm model, to study the impact of spatial positioning of individual species on the temporal development of the community. We found, that as the biofilms developed, species pairs exhibited distinct intermixing patterns unique to the four-member biofilms. Higher biomass and more intermixing were found in four-species biofilms compared to biofilms with fewer species. Intriguingly, in local regions within the four member biofilms where Microbacterium oxydans was scant, both biomass and intermixing of all species were lowered, compared to regions where M. oxydans was present at typical densities. Our data suggest that Xanthomonas retroflexus and M. oxydans, both low abundant biofilm-members, intermixed continuously during the development of the four-species biofilm, hereby facilitating their own establishment. In turn, this seems to have promoted distinct spatial organization of Stenotrophomonas rhizophila and Paenibacillus amylolyticus enabling enhanced growth of all four species. Here local intermixing of bacteria advanced the temporal development of a multi-species biofilm.",
author = "Wenzheng Liu and Jakob Russel and Mette Burm{\o}lle and S{\o}rensen, {S{\o}ren Johannes} and Madsen, {Jonas Stenl{\o}kke}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1038/s41396-018-0112-2",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "1940--1951",
journal = "I S M E Journal",
issn = "1751-7362",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Micro-scale intermixing

T2 - a requisite for stable and synergistic co-establishment in a four-species biofilm

AU - Liu, Wenzheng

AU - Russel, Jakob

AU - Burmølle, Mette

AU - Sørensen, Søren Johannes

AU - Madsen, Jonas Stenløkke

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Microorganisms frequently coexist in complex multispecies communities, where they distribute non-randomly, reflective of the social interactions that occur. It is therefore important to understand how social interactions and local spatial organization influences multispecies biofilm succession. Here the localization of species pairs was analyzed in three dimensions in a reproducible four-species biofilm model, to study the impact of spatial positioning of individual species on the temporal development of the community. We found, that as the biofilms developed, species pairs exhibited distinct intermixing patterns unique to the four-member biofilms. Higher biomass and more intermixing were found in four-species biofilms compared to biofilms with fewer species. Intriguingly, in local regions within the four member biofilms where Microbacterium oxydans was scant, both biomass and intermixing of all species were lowered, compared to regions where M. oxydans was present at typical densities. Our data suggest that Xanthomonas retroflexus and M. oxydans, both low abundant biofilm-members, intermixed continuously during the development of the four-species biofilm, hereby facilitating their own establishment. In turn, this seems to have promoted distinct spatial organization of Stenotrophomonas rhizophila and Paenibacillus amylolyticus enabling enhanced growth of all four species. Here local intermixing of bacteria advanced the temporal development of a multi-species biofilm.

AB - Microorganisms frequently coexist in complex multispecies communities, where they distribute non-randomly, reflective of the social interactions that occur. It is therefore important to understand how social interactions and local spatial organization influences multispecies biofilm succession. Here the localization of species pairs was analyzed in three dimensions in a reproducible four-species biofilm model, to study the impact of spatial positioning of individual species on the temporal development of the community. We found, that as the biofilms developed, species pairs exhibited distinct intermixing patterns unique to the four-member biofilms. Higher biomass and more intermixing were found in four-species biofilms compared to biofilms with fewer species. Intriguingly, in local regions within the four member biofilms where Microbacterium oxydans was scant, both biomass and intermixing of all species were lowered, compared to regions where M. oxydans was present at typical densities. Our data suggest that Xanthomonas retroflexus and M. oxydans, both low abundant biofilm-members, intermixed continuously during the development of the four-species biofilm, hereby facilitating their own establishment. In turn, this seems to have promoted distinct spatial organization of Stenotrophomonas rhizophila and Paenibacillus amylolyticus enabling enhanced growth of all four species. Here local intermixing of bacteria advanced the temporal development of a multi-species biofilm.

U2 - 10.1038/s41396-018-0112-2

DO - 10.1038/s41396-018-0112-2

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29670216

VL - 12

SP - 1940

EP - 1951

JO - I S M E Journal

JF - I S M E Journal

SN - 1751-7362

ER -

ID: 195904766