Microbial interactions shape the structure and function of
microbial communities; microbial association networks in specic environments
have been widely developed to explore these complex systems, but their wired
pattern across microbiomes in various environments at the global scale remains
unexplored. Here we have inferred an Earth microbial association network from a
communal catalogue with 23,595 samples and 12,646 exact sequence variants
from 14 environments in the Earth Microbiome Project dataset.
Results: This non-random scale-free Earth microbial association network
consisted of 8 taxonomy distinct modules linked with dierent environments,
which featured environment specic microbial associations. Dierent topological
features of subnetworks inferred from datasets trimmed into uniform size indicate
distinct association patterns in the microbiomes of various environments. The
proportions of specialist edges, which ranged from 43.0% to 65.7%, highlight
that environmental specic microbial associations are essential features of
microbiomes in various environments. Based on edge-overlap similarity, the
microbiomes of various environments were clustered into two groups, which were
mainly bridged by the microbiomes of plant and animal surface. Acidobacteria
Gp2 and Nisaea were identied as hubs in most of subnetworks. Negative edges
proportions ranged from 1.9% in the soil subnetwork to 48.9% the non-saline
surface subnetwork, suggesting various environments experience distinct
intensities of competition or niche dierentiation.
Conclusion: This investigation provides a new resource for examining Earth
microbial association patterns across environments and emphasizes the network
perspective for comprehensively understanding unique microbiome features.
Keywords: Association pattern; Earth microbiomes; Genelist edges; Network
hubs; Negative associations; Specialist edges; Topological properties
Revised: July 24, 2020 |
Published: June 4, 2020
Citation
Ma B., Y. Wang, S. Ye, S. Liu, E. Stirling, J.A. Gilbert, and K. Faust, et al. 2020.Earth microbial co-occurrence network reveals interconnection pattern across microbiomes.Microbiome 8, no. 1:Article No. 82.PNNL-SA-153001.doi:10.1186/s40168-020-00857-2