Transposable temperate phages promote the evolution of divergent social strategies in Pseudomonas aeruginosa populations
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Siobhán O'Brien, Rolf Kümmerli, Steve Paterson, Craig Winstanley, Michael A. Brockhurst, Transposable temperate phages promote the evolution of divergent social strategies in Pseudomonas aeruginosa populations, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 286, 1912, 2019, 20191794
Abstract
Transposable temperate phages randomly insert into bacterial genomes,
providing increased supply and altered spectra of mutations available to selection, thus opening alternative evolutionary trajectories. Transposable phages
accelerate bacterial adaptation to new environments, but their effect on
adaptation to the social environment is unclear. Using experimental evolution
of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in iron-limited and iron-rich environments, where
the cost of producing cooperative iron-chelating siderophores is high and
low, respectively, we show that transposable phages promote divergence
into extreme siderophore production phenotypes. Iron-limited populations
with transposable phages evolved siderophore overproducing clones alongside siderophore non-producing cheats. Low siderophore production was
associated with parallel mutations in pvd genes, encoding pyoverdine biosynthesis, and pqs genes, encoding quinolone signalling, while high siderophore
production was associated with parallel mutations in phenazine-associated
gene clusters. Notably, some of these parallel mutations were caused by
phage insertional inactivation. These data suggest that transposable phages,
which are widespread in microbial communities, can mediate the evolutionary
divergence of social strategies
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Sponsor: European Research Council (ERC)
Grant Number: 681295
Sponsor: Swiss National Science Foundation
Grant Number: 31003A_182499
Author's Homepage: http://people.tcd.ie/obries79
Type of material: Journal Article

