Bacterial
communication plays an important role in coordinating
microbial behaviors in a community. However, how bacterial communication
organizes the entire community for anaerobes to cope with varied anaerobic–aerobic
conditions remains unclear. We constructed a local bacterial communication
gene (BCG) database comprising 19 BCG subtypes and 20279 protein sequences.
BCGs in anammox-partial nitrification consortia coping with intermittent
aerobic and anaerobic conditions as well as gene expressions of 19
species were inspected. We found that when suffering oxygen changes,
intra- and interspecific communication by a diffusible signal factor
(DSF) and bis-(3′-5′)-cyclic dimeric guanosine monophosphate
(c-di-GMP) changed first, which in turn induced changes of autoinducer-2
(AI-2)-based interspecific and acyl homoserine lactone (AHLs)-based
intraspecific communication. DSF and c-di-GMP-based communication
regulated 455 genes, which covered 13.64% of the genomes and were
mainly involved in antioxidation and metabolite residue degradation.
For anammox bacteria, oxygen influenced DSF and c-di-GMP-based communication
through RpfR to upregulate antioxidant proteins, oxidative damage-repairing
proteins, peptidases, and carbohydrate-active enzymes, which benefited
their adaptation to oxygen changes. Meanwhile, other bacteria also
enhanced DSF and c-di-GMP-based communication by synthesizing DSF,
which helped anammox bacteria survive at aerobic conditions. This
study evidences the role of bacterial communication as an “organizer”
within consortia to cope with environmental changes and sheds light
on understanding bacterial behaviors from the perspective of sociomicrobiology