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Sharing vitamins: Cobamides unveil microbial interactions.

Authors :
Sokolovskaya, Olga M
Sokolovskaya, Olga M
Shelton, Amanda N
Taga, Michiko E
Sokolovskaya, Olga M
Sokolovskaya, Olga M
Shelton, Amanda N
Taga, Michiko E
Source :
Science (New York, N.Y.); vol 369, iss 6499, eaba0165; 0036-8075
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Microbial communities are essential to fundamental processes on Earth. Underlying the compositions and functions of these communities are nutritional interdependencies among individual species. One class of nutrients, cobamides (the family of enzyme cofactors that includes vitamin B12), is widely used for a variety of microbial metabolic functions, but these structurally diverse cofactors are synthesized by only a subset of bacteria and archaea. Advances at different scales of study-from individual isolates, to synthetic consortia, to complex communities-have led to an improved understanding of cobamide sharing. Here, we discuss how cobamides affect microbes at each of these three scales and how integrating different approaches leads to a more complete understanding of microbial interactions.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science (New York, N.Y.); vol 369, iss 6499, eaba0165; 0036-8075
Notes :
application/pdf, Science (New York, N.Y.) vol 369, iss 6499, eaba0165 0036-8075
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391599169
Document Type :
Electronic Resource