Sparse species interactions reproduce abundance correlation patterns in microbial communities

During the last decades, macroecology has identified broad-scale patterns of abundances and diversity of microbial communities and put forward some potential explanations for them. However, these advances are not paralleled by a full understanding of the dynamical processes behind them. In particula...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2024-01, Vol.121 (5), p.e2309575121
Hauptverfasser: Camacho-Mateu, José, Lampo, Aniello, Sireci, Matteo, Muñoz, Miguel A, Cuesta, José A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:During the last decades, macroecology has identified broad-scale patterns of abundances and diversity of microbial communities and put forward some potential explanations for them. However, these advances are not paralleled by a full understanding of the dynamical processes behind them. In particular, abundance fluctuations of different species are found to be correlated, both across time and across communities in metagenomic samples. Reproducing such correlations through appropriate population models remains an open challenge. The present paper tackles this problem and points to sparse species interactions as a necessary mechanism to account for them. Specifically, we discuss several possibilities to include interactions in population models and recognize Lotka-Volterra constants as a successful ansatz. For this, we design a Bayesian inference algorithm to extract sets of interaction constants able to reproduce empirical probability distributions of pairwise correlations for diverse biomes. Importantly, the inferred models still reproduce well-known single-species macroecological patterns concerning abundance fluctuations across both species and communities. Endorsed by the agreement with the empirically observed phenomenology, our analyses provide insights into the properties of the networks of microbial interactions, revealing that sparsity is a crucial feature.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2309575121