Microbial communities are not the easiest to manipulate experimentally in natural ecosystems. However, leaf litter—topmost layer of surface soil—is uniquely suitable to investigate the complexities of community assembly. Here, we reflect on over a decade of collaborative work to address this topic using leaf litter as a model system in Southern California ecosystems. By leveraging a number of methodological advantages of the system, we have worked to demonstrate how four processes—selection, dispersal, drift, and diversification—contribute to bacterial and fungal community assembly and ultimately impact community functioning. Although many dimensions remain to be investigated, our initial results demonstrate that both ecological and evolutionary processes occur simultaneously to influence microbial community assembly. We propose that the development of additional and experimentally tractable microbial systems will be enormously valuable to test the role of eco-evolutionary processes in natural settings and their implications in the face of rapid global change.
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Abstract -
Barbour, Kristin M. ; Weihe, Claudia ; Allison, Steven D. ; Martiny, Jennifer B.H. ( , Soil Biology and Biochemistry)
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Barbour, Kristin M. ; Barrón‐Sandoval, Alberto ; Walters, Kendra E. ; Martiny, Jennifer B. H. ( , Environmental Microbiology)
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Iosue, Christine L. ; Gulotta, Anthony P. ; Selhorst, Kathleen B. ; Mody, Alison C. ; Barbour, Kristin M. ; Marcotte, Meredith J. ; Bui, Lilian N. ; Leone, Sarah G. ; Lang, Emma C. ; Hughes, Genevieve H. ; et al ( , G3: Genes|Genomes|Genetics)Regulatory networks often converge on very similar cis sequences to drive transcriptional programs due to constraints on what transcription factors are present. To determine the role of constraint loss on cis element evolution, we examined the recent appearance of a thiamine starvation regulated promoter in Candida glabrata . This species lacks the ancestral transcription factor Thi2, but still has the transcription factor Pdc2, which regulates thiamine starvation genes, allowing us to determine the effect of constraint change on a new promoter. We identified two different cis elements in C. glabrata - one present in the evolutionarily recent gene called CgPMU3 , and the other element present in the other thiamine (THI) regulated genes. Reciprocal swaps of the cis elements and incorporation of the S. cerevisiae Thi2 transcription factor-binding site into these promoters demonstrate that the two elements are functionally different from one another. Thus, this loss of an imposed constraint on promoter function has generated a novel cis sequence, suggesting that loss of trans constraints can generate a non-convergent pathway with the same output.more » « less