Abstract
Soil moisture and porosity are critical in shaping microbial metabolism. However, accurately representing the soil environment in tractable laboratory experiments remains a challenging frontier. Through our reduced complexity microbial consortium experiment in porous media, we reveal that predicting microbial metabolism from gene-based pathways alone often falls short of capturing the intricate phenotypes driven by cellular interactions. Our findings highlight that porosity and moisture significantly affect chitin decomposition, with environmental matrix (i.e., glass beads) shifting community metabolism towards stress tolerance, reduced resource acquisition, and increased carbon conservation, ultimately invoking unique microbial strategies not evident in liquid cultures. Moreover, we find evidence that changes in moisture relate to community shifts regarding motility, transporters, and biofilm formation, which likely influence chitin degradation. Ultimately, our incubations showcase how reduced complexity communities can be informative of microbial metabolism and present a useful alternative to liquid cultures for studying soil microbial phenotypes.
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CITATION STYLE
Rodríguez-Ramos, J., Sadler, N., Zegeye, E. K., Farris, Y., Purvine, S., Couvillion, S., … Hofmockel, K. S. (2025). Environmental matrix and moisture influence soil microbial phenotypes in a simplified porous media incubation. MSystems, 10(3). https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01616-24
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