| Literature DB >> 32498714 |
Bin Ma1,2, Yiling Wang1, Shudi Ye1, Shan Liu1, Erinne Stirling1,2, Jack A Gilbert3, Karoline Faust4, Rob Knight5, Janet K Jansson6, Cesar Cardona7, Lisa Röttjers4, Jianming Xu8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Microbial interactions shape the structure and function of microbial communities; microbial co-occurrence networks in specific environments have been widely developed to explore these complex systems, but their interconnection pattern across microbiomes in various environments at the global scale remains unexplored. Here, we have inferred an Earth microbial co-occurrence network from a communal catalog with 23,595 samples and 12,646 exact sequence variants from 14 environments in the Earth Microbiome Project dataset.Entities:
Keywords: Co-occurrence patterns; Earth microbiomes; Genelist edges; Microbial network topology; Negative co-occurrence; Network hubs; Specialist edges
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32498714 PMCID: PMC7273686 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-020-00857-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Fig. 1Earth microbial co-occurrence network. a Layout and taxonomic profiles of eight domain modules in the Earth microbial co-occurrence network. Modules (M1–M8) are displayed in different colors. b The distribution of vertices from 14 environments in the network where orange indicates the vertices from corresponding environments
Fig. 2Microbial co-occurrence patterns across dominant taxa. a The profiles of co-occurrence links among dominant taxa; note that connections are colored by the most dominant taxon. b Overrepresentation of co-occurrence links among taxa. The dot indicates significant overrepresentation (P<0.05) between corresponding taxon pairs. c The significant overrepresentation of co-occurrence links among taxa in subnetworks for 14 environments
Fig. 3Network topology of subnetworks inferred from trimmed microbiome abundance datasets of 12 environments. The microbiome abundance datasets were trimmed into 400 top-abundant ESVs and random selected 360 samples
Fig. 4Generalist and specialist edges in subnetworks inferred from trimmed microbiome abundance datasets of 12 environments. a Proportions of generalist edges, specialist edges linking specialist vertex pairs, and specialist edges linking generalist vertex pairs in 12 subnetworks. b Taxa profiles of vertices associating with generalist edges, specialist edges linking specialist vertex pairs, and specialist edges linking generalist vertex pairs. c Interconnection relationships among 12 environments based on similarity of co-occurrence relationships inferred from a Jaccard distance matrix
Fig. 5Taxonomic profiles of hub insubnetworks inferred from trimmed microbiome abundance datasets of 12 environments. a The class proportion of 120 hubs in 12 subnetworks. b The genus profiles of 10 hubs in each subnetwork. The subnetworks for the 12 environments were clustered based on the taxonomic profiles of hubs in the subnetworks
Fig. 6Negative edges in subnetworks inferred from trimmed microbiome abundance datasets of 12 environments. The pie chart in center shows percentage and numbers of negative edges in the 12 subnetworks. The pie charts around the figure’s edge show taxonomic profiles of negative edge associating vertices in the 12 subnetworks