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Bacterial species metabolic interaction network for deciphering the lignocellulolytic system in fungal cultivating termite gut microbiota.

Authors :
Kundu, Pritam
Mondal, Suman
Ghosh, Amit
Source :
Biosystems. Nov2022, Vol. 221, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Fungus-cultivating termite Odontotermes badius developed a mutualistic association with Termitomyces fungi for the plant material decomposition and providing a food source for the host survival. The mutualistic relationship sifted the microbiome composition of the termite gut and Termitomyces fungal comb. Symbiotic bacterial communities in the O. badius gut and fungal comb have been studied extensively to identify abundant bacteria and their lignocellulose degradation capabilities. Despite several metagenomic studies, the species-wide metabolic interaction patterns of bacterial communities in termite gut and fungal comb remains unclear. The bacterial species metabolic interaction network (BSMIN) has been constructed with 230 bacteria identified from the O. badius gut and fungal comb microbiota. The network portrayed the metabolic map of the entire microbiota and highlighted several inter-species biochemical interactions like cross-feeding, metabolic interdependency, and competition. Further, the reconstruction and analysis of the bacterial influence network (BIN) quantified the positive and negative pairwise influences in the termite gut and fungal comb microbial communities. Several key macromolecule degraders and fermentative microbial entities have been identified by analyzing the BIN. The mechanistic interplay between these influential microbial groups and the crucial glycoside hydrolases (GH) enzymes produced by the macromolecule degraders execute the community-wide functionality of lignocellulose degradation and subsequent fermentation. The metabolic interaction pattern between the nine influential microbial species has been determined by considering them growing in a synthetic microbial community. Competition (30%), parasitism (47%), and mutualism (17%) were predicted to be the major mode of metabolic interaction in this synthetic microbial community. Further, the antagonistic metabolic effect was found to be very high in the metabolic-deprived condition, which may disrupt the community functionality. Thus, metabolic interactions of the crucial bacterial species and their GH enzyme cocktail identified from the O. badius gut and fungal comb microbiota may provide essential knowledge for developing a synthetic microcosm with efficient lignocellulolytic machinery. • Metabolic interaction between termite gut and fungal comb microbiota. • Crucial lignocellulolytic and fermentative bacteria identified through BIN. • Assessment of pair-wise bacterial influence pattern in termite gut and fungal comb. • Plant biomass degradation with bacterial GH enzymes were represented in MDN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03032647
Volume :
221
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biosystems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159289680
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biosystems.2022.104763