Surfactin facilitates establishment of Bacillus subtilis in synthetic communities

Soil bacteria are prolific producers of a myriad of biologically active secondary metabolites. These natural products play key roles in modern society, finding use as anti-cancer agents, as food additives, and as alternatives to chemical pesticides. As for their original role in interbacterial commu...

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Veröffentlicht in:The ISME Journal 2025-01
Hauptverfasser: Lozano-Andrade, Carlos N, Dinesen, Caja, Wibowo, Mario, Bach, Nil Arenos, Hesselberg-Thomsen, Viktor, Jarmusch, Scott A, Strube, Mikael Lenz, Kovács, Ákos T
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container_title The ISME Journal
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creator Lozano-Andrade, Carlos N
Dinesen, Caja
Wibowo, Mario
Bach, Nil Arenos
Hesselberg-Thomsen, Viktor
Jarmusch, Scott A
Strube, Mikael Lenz
Kovács, Ákos T
description Soil bacteria are prolific producers of a myriad of biologically active secondary metabolites. These natural products play key roles in modern society, finding use as anti-cancer agents, as food additives, and as alternatives to chemical pesticides. As for their original role in interbacterial communication, secondary metabolites have been extensively studied under in vitro conditions, revealing many roles including antagonism, effects on motility, niche colonization, signaling, and cellular differentiation. Despite the growing body of knowledge on their mode of action, biosynthesis, and regulation, we still do not fully understand the role of secondary metabolites on the ecology of the producers and resident communities in situ. Here, we specifically examine the influence of Bacillus subtilis-produced cyclic lipopeptides during the assembly of a bacterial synthetic community, and simultaneously, explore the impact of cyclic lipopeptides on B. subtilis establishment success in a synthetic community propagated in an artificial soil microcosm. We found that surfactin production facilitates B. subtilis establishment success within multiple synthetic communities. Although neither a wild type nor a cyclic lipopeptide non-producer mutant had a major impact on the synthetic community composition over time, both the B. subtilis and the synthetic community metabolomes were altered during co-cultivation. Overall, our work demonstrates the importance of surfactin production in microbial communities, suggesting a broad spectrum of action of this natural product.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/ismejo/wraf013
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title Surfactin facilitates establishment of Bacillus subtilis in synthetic communities
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