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Cross-kingdom co-occurrence networks in the plant microbiome: Importance and ecological interpretations

Cited 11 time in Web of Science Cited 12 time in Scopus
Authors

Lee, Kiseok Keith; Kim, Hyun; Lee, Yong-Hwan

Issue Date
2022-07
Publisher
Frontiers Media S.A.
Citation
Frontiers in Microbiology, Vol.13, p. 953300
Abstract
Copyright © 2022 Lee, Kim and Lee.Microbial co-occurrence network analysis is being widely used for data exploration in plant microbiome research. Still, challenges lie in how well these microbial networks represent natural microbial communities and how well we can interpret and extract eco-evolutionary insights from the networks. Although many technical solutions have been proposed, in this perspective, we touch on the grave problem of kingdom-level bias in network representation and interpretation. We underscore the eco-evolutionary significance of using cross-kingdom (bacterial-fungal) co-occurrence networks to increase the networks representability of natural communities. To do so, we demonstrate how ecosystem-level interpretation of plant microbiome evolution changes with and without multi-kingdom analysis. Then, to overcome oversimplified interpretation of the networks stemming from the stereotypical dichotomy between bacteria and fungi, we recommend three avenues for ecological interpretation: (1) understanding dynamics and mechanisms of co-occurrence networks through generalized Lotka-Volterra and consumer-resource models, (2) finding alternative ecological explanations for individual negative and positive fungal-bacterial edges, and (3) connecting cross-kingdom networks to abiotic and biotic (host) environments.
ISSN
1664-302X
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/184774
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.953300
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