Growth dependence of conjugation explains limited plasmid invasion in biofilms: an individual-based modelling study
Authored by Jan-Ulrich Kreft, Laurent A Lardon, Brian V Merkey, Barth F Smets, Jose M Seoane
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2011.02535.x
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Plasmid invasion in biofilms is often surprisingly limited in spite of
the close contact of cells in a biofilm. We hypothesized that this poor
plasmid spread into deeper biofilm layers is caused by a dependence of
conjugation on the growth rate (relative to the maximum growth rate) of
the donor. By extending an individual-based model of microbial growth
and interactions to include the dynamics of plasmid carriage and
transfer by individual cells, we were able to conduct in silico tests of
this and other hypotheses on the dynamics of conjugal plasmid transfer
in biofilms. For a generic model plasmid, we find that invasion of a
resident biofilm is indeed limited when plasmid transfer depends on
growth, but not so in the absence of growth dependence. Using
sensitivity analysis we also find that parameters related to timing
(i.e. a lag before the transconjugant can transfer, transfer proficiency
and scan speed) and spatial reach (EPS yield, conjugal pilus length) are
more important for successful plasmid invasion than the recipients'
growth rate or the probability of segregational loss. While this study
identifies one factor that can limit plasmid invasion in biofilms, the
new individual-based framework introduced in this work is a powerful
tool that enables one to test additional hypotheses on the spread and
role of plasmids in microbial biofilms.
Tags
Dynamics
kinetics
Escherichia-coli
Bacterial-populations
In-situ
Horizontal gene-transfer
Pseudomonas-putida
Tol
plasmid
Dna transfer
F-pilus