Adhesion as a weapon in microbial competition
Authored by Jonas Schluter, Carey D Nadell, Bonnie L Bassler, Kevin R Foster
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2014.174
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Microbes attach to surfaces and form dense communities known as
biofilms, which are central to how microbes live and influence humans.
The key defining feature of biofilms is adhesion, whereby cells attach
to one another and to surfaces, via attachment factors and extracellular
polymers. While adhesion is known to be important for the initial stages
of biofilm formation, its function within biofilm communities has not
been studied. Here we utilise an individual-based model of microbial
groups to study the evolution of adhesion. While adhering to a surface
can enable cells to remain in a biofilm, consideration of within-biofilm
competition reveals a potential cost to adhesion: immobility. Highly
adhesive cells that are resistant to movement face being buried and
starved at the base of the biofilm. However, we find that when growth
occurs at the base of a biofilm, adhesion allows cells to capture
substratum territory and force less adhesive, competing cells out of the
system. This process may be particularly important when cells grow on a
host epithelial surface. We test the predictions of our model using the
enteric pathogen Vibrio cholerae, which produces an extracellular matrix
important for biofilm formation. Flow cell experiments indicate that
matrix-secreting cells are highly adhesive and form expanding clusters
that remove non-secreting cells from the population, as predicted by our
simulations. Our study shows how simple physical properties, such as
adhesion, can be critical to understanding evolution and competition
within microbial communities.
Tags
Evolution
Escherichia-coli
Gene
Vibrio-cholerae
Bacterial biofilms
Staphylococcus-epidermidis
Intercellular-adhesion
Multispecies biofilms
Fluorescent protein
Membrane-protein