How the ‘home’ environment influences microbial interactions

This much we know: When viruses infect bacteria – a common occurrence in oceans, soils, even human guts – the interaction results in creation of entirely new organisms called “virocells.” But scientists are still learning about how this merger of microbes affects, and is affected by, their surroundings. 

Four years ago, scientists made a surprising lab . 

The point of the new findings is not only about how the two virocells behave individually in a low-phosphate area of the ocean, but also about how much impact the environment has on the routine event of viruses infecting bacteria. 

“When you deplete only one nutrient, it has a drastic impact – it changes the picture of infection even though it’s the same cell and the same viruses as in the earlier study,” Howard-Varona said. “So what would happen if we starved it even more or we deplete a different nutrient? This tells us it’s going to be very important to study cells and virocells under nutrient conditions that more closely resemble what they encounter in nature.” 

The research has potential to improve large-scale modeling of ocean microbial systems, which to date tends to lack the virocell component, said Matthew Sullivan, co-senior author of both studies and a professor of microbiology at Ohio State. 

“If we are to predict how organisms contribute to ocean geochemistry, we need to know how cell populations interact, how they obtain nutrients from the environment and how that changes the composition of organic matter that makes the cells – and how everything together contributes to climate change and to the oceans’ response to climate change,” said Sullivan, also a professor of civil, environmental and geodetic engineering and founding director of Ohio State’s Center of Microbiome Science.  

“The same is true of modeling microbes in soils, which don’t have a nutrient-rich environment, either, and where we know very little about virocells and how they contribute to the health of roots and crops.” 

In the new study, researchers found that the two infecting viruses did wield plenty of control over functions that dominated the two resulting virocells. The viruses, called phages, were selected for their very different qualities: One is very genomically similar to the host bacteria, so it focused on recycling existing resources, and the other, less similar phage had to work harder to generate resources. In both cases, the aim is to access energy and maximize making viral copies and eventually killing the host. 

“But those differences were narrowed in the low-phosphate environment, so they’re less important – suggesting the environment may have a stronger effect than the infecting viruses on how virocells behave,” Howard-Varona said. 

And then there were activities common to both virocells in response to the starvation: activating a cell-wide stress response, obtaining energy from metabolizing fats rather than carbs, and reducing the amount of organic matter they consume from the environment. 

“Every cell in the world needs phosphate to make DNA and energy, and so without it, there’s no life, no function, no metabolism,” Howard-Varona said. “And what we’ve shown is that in these conditions, virocells have commonalities. They sense the nutrient limitation and behave more similarly than they did when they were growing in a nutrient-rich environment.

“The environment is very important to viral infections – and so you can imagine this is true for every environment.” 

The researchers will be applying much of what they’ve learned from the marine environment to studies of soil virocells. 

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the National Science Foundation, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and University of Michigan discretionary funds.

Co-authors include Azriel Krongauz, Natalie Solonenko, Ahmed Zayed and Subhadeep Paul of Ohio State; co-first author Morgan Lindback and co-senior author Melissa Duhaime of the University of Michigan; Jane Fudyma and Malak Tfaily of the University of Arizona; William Andreopoulos and Tijana Glavina del Rio of the DOE; and Heather Olson, Young-Mo Kim, Jennifer Kyle and Joshua Adkins of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.


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