Literature DB >> 17210916

Cooperation and conflict in microbial biofilms.

Joao B Xavier1, Kevin R Foster.   

Abstract

Biofilms, in which cells attach to surfaces and secrete slime (polymeric substances), are central to microbial life. Biofilms are often thought to require high levels of cooperation because extracellular polymeric substances are a shared resource produced by one cell that can be used by others. Here we examine this hypothesis by using a detailed individual-based simulation of a biofilm to investigate the outcome of evolutionary competitions between strains that differ in their level of polymer production. Our model includes a biochemical description of the carbon fluxes for growth and polymer production, and it explicitly calculates diffusion-reaction effects and the resulting solute gradients in the biofilm. An emergent property of these simple but realistic mechanistic assumptions is a strong evolutionary advantage to extracellular polymer production. Polymer secretion is altruistic to cells above a focal cell: it pushes later generations in their lineage up and out into better oxygen conditions, but it harms others; polymer production suffocates neighboring nonpolymer producers. This property, analogous to vertical growth in plants, suggests that polymer secretion provides a strong competitive advantage to cell lineages within mixed-genotype biofilms: global cooperation is not required. Our model fundamentally changes how biofilms are expected to respond to changing social conditions; the presence of multiple strains in a biofilm should promote rather than inhibit polymer secretion.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17210916      PMCID: PMC1783407          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0607651104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  40 in total

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5.  Diminishing returns in social evolution: the not-so-tragic commons.

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6.  The evolution of groups of cooperating bacteria and the growth rate versus yield trade-off.

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Review 7.  Dynamics of development and dispersal in sessile microbial communities: examples from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Pseudomonas putida model biofilms.

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Journal:  Microbiology       Date:  2001-11       Impact factor: 2.777

10.  Biofilm susceptibility to bacteriophage attack: the role of phage-borne polysaccharide depolymerase.

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8.  Microstencils to generate defined, multi-species patterns of bacteria.

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Review 9.  Pseudomonad reverse carbon catabolite repression, interspecies metabolite exchange, and consortial division of labor.

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Review 10.  Subgingival biofilm formation.

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Journal:  Periodontol 2000       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 7.589

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