Biofilms promote altruism
Authored by Jan-Ulrich Kreft
Date Published: 2004
DOI: 10.1099/mic.0.26829-0
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
Java
BacSim
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.biosciences-labs.bham.ac.uk/kreftlab/downloads/software/biofilm_models_source_java.zip
Abstract
The origin of altruism is a fundamental problem in evolution, and the
maintenance of biodiversity is a fundamental problem in ecology. These
two problems combine with the fundamental microbiological question of
whether it is always advantageous for a unicellular organism to grow as
fast as possible, The common basis for these three themes is a trade-off
between growth rate and growth yield, which in turn is based on
irreversible thermodynamics. The trade-off creates an evolutionary
alternative between two strategies: high growth yield at low growth rate
versus high growth rate at low growth yield. High growth yield at low
growth rate is a case of an altruistic strategy because it increases the
fitness of the group by using resources economically at the cost of
decreased fitness, or growth rate, of the individual. The
group-beneficial behaviour is advantageous in the long term, whereas the
high growth rate strategy is advantageous in the short term. Coexistence
of species requires differences between their niches, and niche space is
typically divided into four `axes' (time, space, resources, predators).
This neglects survival strategies based on cooperation, which extend the
possibilities of coexistence, arguing for the inclusion of cooperation
as the fifth `axis'. Here, individual-based model simulations show that
spatial structure, as in, for example, biofilms, is necessary for the
origin and maintenance of this `primitive' altruistic strategy and that
the common belief that growth rate but not yield decides the outcome of
competition is based on chemostat models and experiments. This
evolutionary perspective on life in biofilms can explain long-known
biofilm characteristics, such as the structural organization into
microcolonies, the often-observed lack of mixing among microcolonies, and the shedding of single cells, as promoting the origin and
maintenance of the altruistic strategy. Whereas biofilms enrich
altruists, enrichment cultures, microbiology's paradigm for isolating
bacteria into pure culture, select for highest growth rate.
Tags
Evolution
Cooperation
microorganisms
Populations
Escherichia-coli
Prisoners-dilemma
Growth-rate
Communities
Pseudomonas-aeruginosa
Bacterium myxococcus-xanthus