Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Anatomy promotes neutral coexistence of strains in the human skin microbiome

14

Citations

66

References

2021

Year

TLDR

What enables strains of the same species to coexist in a microbiome? The study investigates whether host anatomy explains strain co‑residence of Cutibacterium acnes and proposes that pore anatomy imposes random single‑cell bottlenecks that reduce competition and promote coexistence. The authors reconstructed on‑person evolution and migration via whole‑genome sequencing of C. acnes colonies from healthy subjects, revealing substantial spatial structure at the pore level.

Abstract

What enables strains of the same species to coexist in a microbiome? Here, we investigate whether host anatomy can explain strain co-residence of Cutibacterium acnes, the most abundant species on human skin. We reconstruct on-person evolution and migration using whole-genome sequencing of C. acnes colonies acquired from healthy subjects, including from individual skin pores, and find considerable spatial structure at the level of pores. Although lineages (sets of colonies separated by <100 mutations) with in vitro fitness differences coexist within centimeter-scale regions, each pore is dominated by a single lineage. Moreover, colonies from a pore typically have identical genomes. An absence of adaptive signatures suggests a genotype-independent source of low within-pore diversity. We therefore propose that pore anatomy imposes random single-cell bottlenecks; the resulting population fragmentation reduces competition and promotes coexistence. Our findings suggest that therapeutic interventions involving pore-dwelling species might focus on removing resident populations over optimizing probiotic fitness.

References

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