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Social interactions and cheating in the microbial world

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Presentation on theme: "Social interactions and cheating in the microbial world"— Presentation transcript:

1 Social interactions and cheating in the microbial world
Steve Allison UC Irvine Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Earth System Science

2 What is a microbe? Bacteria, fungi, and protists
Interact with environment at microscopic scales NIH David Read

3 Microbes are diverse and abundant
1 billion bacteria in a handful of soil 1 million in a mouthful of seawater More biomass than in plants 10 bacterial cells for every 1 human cell in your body 1-10 million species of microbes globally Whitman et al. 1998, Norm Pace

4 Why microbes are important
Global carbon cycling Nutrient cycling, soil fertility (agriculture) Biomolecules; drug discovery

5 Microbe “social lives”
Many microbes live in complex communities They need energy and nutrients Microbial behaviors: Cooperation Communication Cheating Behaviors require production of chemicals that operate outside the cell

6 Cooperation example: Biofilms
Polysaccharides

7 Where are biofilms? On your teeth Inside showerheads
On rocks in streams Between particles of soil Almost anywhere with liquid water

8 Communication: Quorum sensing
A behavior is triggered when cell densities cross a threshold Requires production of an inducer molecule Inducer Product Low density High density

9 Reasons for quorum sensing
Coordination of group behavior Evasion of host defenses by pathogen Can trigger biofilm formation (or cessation)

10 Costs and benefits of cooperation
Nutrients Oxygen Polysaccharides

11 Evolution of cheating Making biofilm is expensive All microbes benefit
Natural selection favors cheater mutants Cheaters Paul Rainey

12 Do cheaters win? What might prevent cheaters from taking over?
Producers must get a bigger share of the benefits Products benefit close relatives, not cheaters (kin selection) Spatial structure

13 Spatial structure favors producers
Cheater Bottleneck Producer Chuang et al. 2009

14 Extracellular enzymes
Some microbes “forage” with enzymes They eat complex chemicals produced by plants, animals, and other microbes Prevents the world from filling with dead bodies Enzymes contain carbon and nitrogen

15 Enzyme model Processes: Metabolism Reproduction Input Enzyme synthesis
Substrate Enzyme Product Cheater Producer Processes: Metabolism Reproduction Input Enzyme synthesis Diffusion Enzyme catalysis Enzymes are a public good Product uptake Allison 2005

16 Coexistence at low diffusion
Increasing enzyme diffusion Time

17 Increasing enzyme diffusion
Time Cheaper enzymes

18 Cheating reduces enzyme function
Product concentration (mg/l) Low product formation

19 Cheater experiments Pseudomonas fluorescens
Producer: degrades protein with protease Cheater: protease knockout Well mixed flasks Protein medium Digested protein medium Collaborators: Mindy Ta, Lucy Lu, Jennifer Chen

20 Cheaters suppress producers on protein
Competition Cheaters Other plate counts show cheaters do equally well or better when producers present, while producers do worse when cheaters present.

21 Cheaters suppress producers on protein
Digested protein Producers Competition Cheaters Other plate counts show cheaters do equally well or better when producers present, while producers do worse when cheaters present.

22 Cheaters suppress protease production
Protein Producers Time interaction also significant Competition Cheaters

23 Role of enzymes in the ocean
MICRO time series Newport Beach, CA Collaborators: Adam Martiny, Sunny Jiang, numerous undergrads WHOI Marine snow

24 Most peptidase activity is bound

25 Phosphatase is freely dissolved

26 Ocean carbon sequestration
CO2 CO2, Nutrients Phytoplankton Cheater Producer Surface ocean Deep ocean

27 Take-home messages Microbes are diverse and important
Microbes cooperate, but natural selection can favor cheating Microbial behavior and evolution has consequences for ecosystems Thank you: Lab members, NSF, audience


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