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Interactions in the microbiome: communities of organisms and communities of genes
Author(s) -
Boon Eva,
Meehan Conor J.,
Whidden Chris,
Wong Dennis H.J.,
Langille Morgan G.I.,
Beiko Robert G.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
fems microbiology reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.91
H-Index - 212
eISSN - 1574-6976
pISSN - 0168-6445
DOI - 10.1111/1574-6976.12035
Subject(s) - biology , trait , microbiome , phylogenetic tree , biodiversity , taxon , set (abstract data type) , ecology , metagenomics , community , evolutionary biology , phylogenetic diversity , computational biology , gene , genetics , ecosystem , computer science , programming language
Abstract A central challenge in microbial community ecology is the delineation of appropriate units of biodiversity, which can be taxonomic, phylogenetic, or functional in nature. The term ‘community’ is applied ambiguously; in some cases, the term refers simply to a set of observed entities, while in other cases, it requires that these entities interact with one another. Microorganisms can rapidly gain and lose genes, potentially decoupling community roles from taxonomic and phylogenetic groupings. Trait‐based approaches offer a useful alternative, but many traits can be defined based on gene functions, metabolic modules, and genomic properties, and the optimal set of traits to choose is often not obvious. An analysis that considers taxon assignment and traits in concert may be ideal, with the strengths of each approach offsetting the weaknesses of the other. Individual genes also merit consideration as entities in an ecological analysis, with characteristics such as diversity, turnover, and interactions modeled using genes rather than organisms as entities. We identify some promising avenues of research that are likely to yield a deeper understanding of microbial communities that shift from observation‐based questions of ‘Who is there?’ and ‘What are they doing?’ to the mechanistically driven question of ‘How will they respond?’

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