Talk Overview
Most microbes in nature exist within a microbial community. However, little is known about how different microbial species interact with each other and their environment to form these communities. Rachel Dutton uses cheese as a model system for studying microbial ecosystems. By studying microbial communities in different types of cheese, and observing how they change during the cheese aging process, Dutton has uncovered many of the complexities of how these different microbes interact with one another over time. By recapitulating these interactions in vitro, Dutton is starting to answer fundamental questions about microbial community formation and dynamics.
Speaker Bio
Rachel Dutton
Rachel Dutton is a Bauer Fellow at the Harvard University Center for Systems Biology, where she studies microbial communities using cheese as a model system. She has collaborated with numerous chefs, as well as the food science author Harold McGee, and her work has been featured in the New York Times, Boston Globe, NPR, and… Continue Reading
Dominik says
At around 22:00, in among the speculations as to how the growth of one species may be necessary for subsequent colonization by other MOs (ie. paving the way, so to speak), there didn’t seem to be an explanation of, what to me, appears to be the most interesting aspect of the charts, which is the marked dominance of Escherichia/Averyella/Leuconostoc in the first days of fermentation and the rapid replacement of these species in favour of Staph. Is there a simple explanation for this pattern or is this still a matter of debate/further speculation?
very interesting topic, elegantly researched and engagingly presented!