Spatial dynamics of synthetic microbial mutualists and their parasites
Daniel R Amor,
Raúl Montañez,
Salva Duran-Nebreda and
Ricard Solé
PLOS Computational Biology, 2017, vol. 13, issue 8, 1-22
Abstract:
A major force contributing to the emergence of novelty in nature is the presence of cooperative interactions, where two or more components of a system act in synergy, sometimes leading to higher-order, emergent phenomena. Within molecular evolution, the so called hypercycle defines the simplest model of an autocatalytic cycle, providing major theoretical insights on the evolution of cooperation in the early biosphere. These closed cooperative loops have also inspired our understanding of how catalytic loops appear in ecological systems. In both cases, hypercycle and ecological cooperative loops, the role played by space seems to be crucial for their stability and resilience against parasites. However, it is difficult to test these ideas in natural ecosystems, where time and spatial scales introduce considerable limitations. Here, we use engineered bacteria as a model system to a variety of environmental scenarios identifying trends that transcend the specific model system, such an enhanced genetic diversity in environments requiring mutualistic interactions. Interestingly, we show that improved environments can slow down mutualistic range expansions as a result of genetic drift effects preceding local resource depletion. Moreover, we show that a parasitic strain is excluded from the population during range expansions (which acknowledges a classical prediction). Nevertheless, environmental deterioration can reshape population interactions, this same strain becoming part of a three-species mutualistic web in scenarios in which the two-strain mutualism becomes non functional. The evolutionary and ecological implications for the design of synthetic ecosystems are outlined.Author summary: In order to achieve greater levels of complexity, complex systems often display cooperative interactions that enable the formation and stabilisation of mutualisms. Theoretical models have shown that closed chains of cooperative species or hypercycles might have been crucial in the evolution towards complexity in early molecular replicators. However, parasites can easily destroy the cooperative loop, unless the system is embedded in a spatial context where interactions are limited to nearest neighbours. A dynamically similar phenomenon occurs in ecological webs, where closed positive feedback loops contribute to global stability and ecophysiology. Here we explore this problem by engineering synthetic cooperative strains of microbes that grow and interact in a cell culture under the absence and presence of a synthetic parasitic strains. By analysing the impact of cooperation under different conditions, we find that cooperative replication is successful and overcomes competitive interactions in nutrient-poor environments. However, the same closed loop fails to establish in nutrient-rich media. Moreover, parasitic entities that jeopardise cooperation under well-mixed conditions can be overcome by hypercycles when growing in a two-dimensional space.
Date: 2017
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1005689
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005689
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