4.6 Review

The Origin of Niches and Species in the Bacterial World

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.657986

Keywords

bacterial niches; bacterial species; speciation; evolution; nichification

Categories

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [ST131TS, JPIAMR16-AC16/00036, JPIAMR16-AC16/00039]
  2. InGEMICS-CM - Comunidad de Madrid (Spain) [B2017/BMD-3691]
  3. European Structural and Investment Funds
  4. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity [BIO2017-83128-R]
  5. CIBER (CIBER in Epidemiology and Public Health, CIBERESP) [CB06/02/0053]
  6. Instituto de Salud Carlos III
  7. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF, 'A way to achieve Europe')

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Niches are spaces for the biological units of selection, with every organism having its own niche. Microbial organisms constantly diversify, with the selfish behavior of new organisms limiting niche variation and ultimately facilitating speciation.
Niches are spaces for the biological units of selection, from cells to complex communities. In a broad sense, species are biological units of individuation. Niches do not exist without individual organisms, and every organism has a niche. We use niche in the Hutchinsonian sense as an abstraction of a multidimensional environmental space characterized by a variety of conditions, both biotic and abiotic, whose quantitative ranges determine the positive or negative growth rates of the microbial individual, typically a species, but also parts of the communities of species contained in this space. Microbial organisms (species) constantly diversify, and such diversification (radiation) depends on the possibility of opening up unexploited or insufficiently exploited niches. Niche exploitation frequently implies niche construction, as the colonized niche evolves with time, giving rise to new potential subniches, thereby influencing the selection of a series of new variants in the progeny. The evolution of niches and organisms is the result of reciprocal interacting processes that form a single unified process. Centrifugal microbial diversification expands the limits of the species' niches while a centripetal or cohesive process occurs simultaneously, mediated by horizontal gene transfers and recombinatorial events, condensing all of the information recovered during the diversifying specialization into novel organisms (possible future species), thereby creating a more complex niche, where the selfishness of the new organism(s) establishes a homeostatic power limiting the niche's variation. Once the niche's full carrying capacity has been reached, reproductive isolation occurs, as no foreign organisms can outcompete the established population/community, thereby facilitating speciation. In the case of individualization-speciation of the microbiota, its contribution to the animal' gut structure is a type of niche construction, the result of crosstalk between the niche (host) and microorganism(s). Lastly, there is a parallelism between the hierarchy of niches and that of microbial individuals. The increasing anthropogenic effects on the biosphere (such as globalization) might reduce the diversity of niches and bacterial individuals, with the potential emergence of highly transmissible multispecialists (which are eventually deleterious) resulting from the homogenization of the microbiosphere, a possibility that should be explored and prevented.

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