Study finds new approach for identifying keystone microbial species

Study finds new approach for identifying keystone microbial species
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Massachusetts, US: Microbial communities are hypothesised to contain keystone species, which can have a disproportionate impact on community stability even if they are present in low abundances. Identifying these keystone species can be difficult, especially in the human gut, because systematic removal cannot be used to isolate them.

Researchers led by a team at Brigham and Women's Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, have designed a new data-driven keystone species identification (DKI) framework that uses machine learning to resolve this difficulty.

Using a deep-learning model trained on real human gut microbiome data from a curated metagenomic database, the investigators were able to simulate the removal of any species in any gut microbiome sample. This "thought experiment" enabled them to calculate the "keystoneness" or the relative essentiality of each species in each community.

The scientists found that the predicted keystone species varied across communities. Some scored low median keystoneness across all samples, and were unlikely to be essential to any community. By contrast, those species with high median scores were likely to be keystone in some communities, but not in others. Similar results were also observed from human oral microbiome and environmental microbiomes. These results imply that the notion of keystone microbial species is community specific or context dependent.

Many human gut microbial species are known to have essential functions such as breaking down complex starches or maintaining healthy intestinal environments. The authors were able to use their DKI framework to identify potential keystone species involved in such functions, including one that aids digestion in formula-fed infants and adults.

"Our DKI framework demonstrates the power of machine learning in tackling a fundamental problem in community ecology," said Yang-Yu Liu, PhD, of the Channing Division of Network Medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital. "Our DKI framework can be adapted to facilitate future data-driven work on complex microbial communities."