The Evolution of Quorum Sensing as a Mechanism to Infer Kinship
Authored by Jonas Schluter, Kevin R Foster, Sara Mitri, Armin P Schoech
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004848
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/jsevo/ibmQS.git
Abstract
Bacteria regulate many phenotypes via quorum sensing systems. Quorum
sensing is typically thought to evolve because the regulated cooperative
phenotypes are only beneficial at certain cell densities. However, quorum sensing systems are also threatened by non-cooperative
``cheaters{''} that may exploit quorum-sensing regulated cooperation, which begs the question of how quorum sensing systems are maintained in
nature. Here we study the evolution of quorum sensing using an
individual-based model that captures the natural ecology and population
structuring of microbial communities. We first recapitulate the two
existing observations on quorum sensing evolution: density-dependent
benefits favor quorum sensing but competition and cheating will
destabilize it. We then model quorum sensing in a dense community like a
biofilm, which reveals a novel benefit to quorum sensing that is
intrinsically evolutionarily stable. In these communities, competing
microbial genotypes gradually segregate over time leading to positive
correlation between density and genetic similarity between neighboring
cells (relatedness). This enables quorum sensing to track genetic
relatedness and ensures that costly cooperative traits are only
activated once a cell is safely surrounded by clonemates. We hypothesize
that under similar natural conditions, the benefits of quorum sensing
will not result from an assessment of density but from the ability to
infer kinship.
Tags
Cooperation
Diversity
conflict
patterns
Social interactions
Cell communication
Pseudomonas-aeruginosa
Bacterial-populations
Multispecies biofilms
Genetic drift