PaperPlayer biorxiv evolutionary biology

Density-dependent private benefit leads to bacterial mutualism


Listen Later

Link to bioRxiv paper:
http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.07.28.224550v1?rss=1
Authors: Jimenez, P., Scheuring, I.
Abstract:
Microorganisms produce materials leaked from the cell which are beneficial for themselves and their neighbors. We modeled the situation when cells can produce different costly secretions which increase the carrying capacity of the population. Strains that lose the function of producing one or more secretions avoid the cost of production and can exhaust the producers. However, secreting substances provides a private benefit for the producers in a density-dependent way. We developed a model to examine the outcome of the selection among different type of producer strains from the non-producer strain to the partial producers, to the full producer one. We were particularly interested in circumstances under which selection maintains partners that produce complementary secreted materials thus forming an interdependent mutualistic interaction. We show that interdependent mutualism is selected under broad range of conditions if private benefit decreases with density. Selection frequently causes the coexistence of more and less generalist cooperative strains, thus cooperation and exploitation co-occur. Interdependent mutualism is evolved under more specific circumstances if private benefit increases with density and these general observations are valid in a well-mixed and in a structured deme model. We show that the applied population structure supports cooperation in general, which, depending on the level of private benefit and intensity of mixing helps either the specialist or the generalist cooperators.
Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

PaperPlayer biorxiv evolutionary biologyBy Multimodal LLC