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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 10 1996, 3632-3639, Vol 62, No. 10
ME Coleman, DW Dreesen and RG Wiegert
Many investigations of the interactions of microbial competitors in the
gastrointestinal tract used continuous-flow anaerobic cultures. The
simulation reported here was a deterministic 11-compartment model coded by
using the C programming language and based on parameters from published in
vitro studies and assumptions were data were unavailable. The resource
compartments were glucose, lactose and sucrose, starch, sorbose, and
serine. Six microbial competitors included indigenous nonpathogenic
colonizers of the human gastrointestinal tract (Escherichia coli,
Enterobacter aerogenes, Bacteroids ovatus, Fusobacterium varium, and
Enterococcus faecalis) and the potential human enteropathogen Salmonella
typhimurium. Flows of carbon from the resources to the microbes were
modified by resource and space controls. Partitioning of resources to the
competitors that could utilize them was calculated at each iteration on the
basis of availability of all resources by feeding preference functions.
Resources did not accumulate during iterations of the model. The results of
the computer simulation of microbial competition model and for various
modifications of the model. The results were based on few measured
parameters but may be useful in the design of user-friendly software to aid
researchers in defining and manipulating the microbial ecology of colonic
ecosystems as relates to food-borne disease.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
A simulation of microbial competition in the human colonic ecosystem
Food Safety and Inspection Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, DC 20250-3700, USA. usdafsis/g=p/s=coleman@mhs.attmail.com
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