Assembly of functional microbial ecosystems: from molecular circuits to communities

FEMS Microbiol Rev. 2024 Nov 23;48(6):fuae026. doi: 10.1093/femsre/fuae026.

Abstract

Microbes compete and cooperate with each other via a variety of chemicals and circuits. Recently, to decipher, simulate, or reconstruct microbial communities, many researches have been engaged in engineering microbiomes with bottom-up synthetic biology approaches for diverse applications. However, they have been separately focused on individual perspectives including genetic circuits, communications tools, microbiome engineering, or promising applications. The strategies for coordinating microbial ecosystems based on different regulation circuits have not been systematically summarized, which calls for a more comprehensive framework for the assembly of microbial communities. In this review, we summarize diverse cross-talk and orthogonal regulation modules for de novo bottom-up assembling functional microbial ecosystems, thus promoting further consortia-based applications. First, we review the cross-talk communication-based regulations among various microbial communities from intra-species and inter-species aspects. Then, orthogonal regulations are summarized at metabolites, transcription, translation, and post-translation levels, respectively. Furthermore, to give more details for better design and optimize various microbial ecosystems, we propose a more comprehensive design-build-test-learn procedure including function specification, chassis selection, interaction design, system build, performance test, modeling analysis, and global optimization. Finally, current challenges and opportunities are discussed for the further development and application of microbial ecosystems.

Keywords: cell-cell communication; microbiome engineering; orthogonal regulations; signal crosstalk; synthetic ecology; synthetic microbial consortia.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Bacteria / genetics
  • Bacteria / metabolism
  • Ecosystem
  • Microbial Interactions
  • Microbiota* / physiology
  • Synthetic Biology*