December 11, 2020
Journal Article

Using metacommunity ecology to understand environmental metabolomes

Abstract

Environmental metabolomes are fundamentally coupled to microbially-linked biogeochemical processes within ecosystems. However, significant gaps exist in our understanding of their spatiotemporal organization, limiting our ability to uncover transferrable principles and predict ecosystem function. We propose that a new theoretical paradigm, which integrates concepts from metacommunity ecology, is necessary to reveal underlying mechanisms governing metabolomes. We call this synthesis between ecology and metabolomics ‘meta-metabolome ecology’ and demonstrate its utility using a mass spectrometry dataset. We developed three relational metabolite dendrograms using molecular properties and putative biochemical transformations and performed ecological null modeling. Based upon null modeling results, we show that stochastic processes drove molecular properties while biochemical transformations were structured deterministically. We further suggest that potentially biochemically active metabolites were more deterministically assembled than less active metabolites. We propose that this paradigm will allow researchers to study the connections between ecological systems and their molecular processes in previously inaccessible detail.

Revised: January 7, 2021 | Published: December 11, 2020

Citation

Danczak R.E., R.K. Chu, S.J. Fansler, A.E. Goldman, E.B. Graham, M.M. Tfaily, and J.G. Toyoda, et al. 2020. Using metacommunity ecology to understand environmental metabolomes. Nature Communications 11, no. 1:Article No. 6369. PNNL-SA-152827. doi:10.1038/s41467-020-19989-y