Literature DB >> 22933562

Culture history and population heterogeneity as determinants of bacterial adaptation: the adaptomics of a single environmental transition.

Ben Ryall1, Gustavo Eydallin, Thomas Ferenci.   

Abstract

Diversity in adaptive responses is common within species and populations, especially when the heterogeneity of the frequently large populations found in environments is considered. By focusing on events in a single clonal population undergoing a single transition, we discuss how environmental cues and changes in growth rate initiate a multiplicity of adaptive pathways. Adaptation is a comprehensive process, and stochastic, regulatory, epigenetic, and mutational changes can contribute to fitness and overlap in timing and frequency. We identify culture history as a major determinant of both regulatory adaptations and microevolutionary change. Population history before a transition determines heterogeneities due to errors in translation, stochastic differences in regulation, the presence of aged, damaged, cheating, or dormant cells, and variations in intracellular metabolite or regulator concentrations. It matters whether bacteria come from dense, slow-growing, stressed, or structured states. Genotypic adaptations are history dependent due to variations in mutation supply, contingency gene changes, phase variation, lateral gene transfer, and genome amplifications. Phenotypic adaptations underpin genotypic changes in situations such as stress-induced mutagenesis or prophage induction or in biofilms to give a continuum of adaptive possibilities. Evolutionary selection additionally provides diverse adaptive outcomes in a single transition and generally does not result in single fitter types. The totality of heterogeneities in an adapting population increases the chance that at least some individuals meet immediate or future challenges. However, heterogeneity complicates the adaptomics of single transitions, and we propose that subpopulations will need to be integrated into future population biology and systems biology predictions of bacterial behavior.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22933562      PMCID: PMC3429624          DOI: 10.1128/MMBR.05028-11

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev        ISSN: 1092-2172            Impact factor:   11.056


  366 in total

1.  Fitness effects of advantageous mutations in evolving Escherichia coli populations.

Authors:  M Imhof; C Schlotterer
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2001-01-30       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Stress and the single cell: intrapopulation diversity is a mechanism to ensure survival upon exposure to stress.

Authors:  Ian R Booth
Journal:  Int J Food Microbiol       Date:  2002-09-15       Impact factor: 5.277

3.  Bacterial persistence as a phenotypic switch.

Authors:  Nathalie Q Balaban; Jack Merrin; Remy Chait; Lukasz Kowalik; Stanislas Leibler
Journal:  Science       Date:  2004-08-12       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 4.  A new model for SOS-induced mutagenesis: how RecA protein activates DNA polymerase V.

Authors:  Meghna Patel; Qingfei Jiang; Roger Woodgate; Michael M Cox; Myron F Goodman
Journal:  Crit Rev Biochem Mol Biol       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 8.250

5.  Inorganic polyphosphate and the induction of rpoS expression.

Authors:  T Shiba; K Tsutsumi; H Yano; Y Ihara; A Kameda; K Tanaka; H Takahashi; M Munekata; N N Rao; A Kornberg
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1997-10-14       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Contact-dependent inhibition of growth in Escherichia coli.

Authors:  Stephanie K Aoki; Rupinderjit Pamma; Aaron D Hernday; Jessica E Bickham; Bruce A Braaten; David A Low
Journal:  Science       Date:  2005-08-19       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Phase variation of Ag43 in Escherichia coli: Dam-dependent methylation abrogates OxyR binding and OxyR-mediated repression of transcription.

Authors:  W Haagmans; M van der Woude
Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  2000-02       Impact factor: 3.501

Review 8.  Regulation of glycogen metabolism in yeast and bacteria.

Authors:  Wayne A Wilson; Peter J Roach; Manuel Montero; Edurne Baroja-Fernández; Francisco José Muñoz; Gustavo Eydallin; Alejandro M Viale; Javier Pozueta-Romero
Journal:  FEMS Microbiol Rev       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 16.408

9.  Strain variation in ppGpp concentration and RpoS levels in laboratory strains of Escherichia coli K-12.

Authors:  Beny Spira; Xuye Hu; Thomas Ferenci
Journal:  Microbiology (Reading)       Date:  2008-09       Impact factor: 2.777

Review 10.  Microbial laboratory evolution in the era of genome-scale science.

Authors:  Tom M Conrad; Nathan E Lewis; Bernhard Ø Palsson
Journal:  Mol Syst Biol       Date:  2011-07-05       Impact factor: 11.429

View more
  44 in total

Review 1.  Mutation--The Engine of Evolution: Studying Mutation and Its Role in the Evolution of Bacteria.

Authors:  Ruth Hershberg
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol       Date:  2015-09-01       Impact factor: 10.005

2.  The rpoS gene is predominantly inactivated during laboratory storage and undergoes source-sink evolution in Escherichia coli species.

Authors:  Alexandre Bleibtreu; Olivier Clermont; Pierre Darlu; Jérémy Glodt; Catherine Branger; Bertrand Picard; Erick Denamur
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2014-09-29       Impact factor: 3.490

3.  Differentiation of Vegetative Cells into Spores: a Kinetic Model Applied to Bacillus subtilis.

Authors:  Emilie Gauvry; Anne-Gabrielle Mathot; Olivier Couvert; Ivan Leguérinel; Matthieu Jules; Louis Coroller
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2019-05-02       Impact factor: 4.792

4.  Mutant Strains of Escherichia coli and Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Obtained by Laboratory Selection To Survive on Metallic Copper Surfaces.

Authors:  Pauline Bleichert; Lucy Bütof; Christian Rückert; Martin Herzberg; Romeu Francisco; Paula V Morais; Gregor Grass; Jörn Kalinowski; Dietrich H Nies
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2020-12-17       Impact factor: 4.792

5.  Diel size distributions reveal seasonal growth dynamics of a coastal phytoplankter.

Authors:  Kristen R Hunter-Cevera; Michael G Neubert; Andrew R Solow; Robert J Olson; Alexi Shalapyonok; Heidi M Sosik
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-06-23       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Rapid conversion of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to a spherical cell morphotype facilitates tolerance to carbapenems and penicillins but increases susceptibility to antimicrobial peptides.

Authors:  Leigh G Monahan; Lynne Turnbull; Sarah R Osvath; Debra Birch; Ian G Charles; Cynthia B Whitchurch
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2014-01-13       Impact factor: 5.191

7.  Contribution of phenotypic heterogeneity to adaptive antibiotic resistance.

Authors:  María Antonia Sánchez-Romero; Josep Casadesús
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-12-18       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 8.  Engineering reduced evolutionary potential for synthetic biology.

Authors:  Brian A Renda; Michael J Hammerling; Jeffrey E Barrick
Journal:  Mol Biosyst       Date:  2014-02-21

Review 9.  Stress Physiology of Lactic Acid Bacteria.

Authors:  Konstantinos Papadimitriou; Ángel Alegría; Peter A Bron; Maria de Angelis; Marco Gobbetti; Michiel Kleerebezem; José A Lemos; Daniel M Linares; Paul Ross; Catherine Stanton; Francesca Turroni; Douwe van Sinderen; Pekka Varmanen; Marco Ventura; Manuel Zúñiga; Effie Tsakalidou; Jan Kok
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2016-07-27       Impact factor: 11.056

10.  A design-constraint trade-off underpins the diversity in ecologically important traits in species Escherichia coli.

Authors:  Katherine Phan; Thomas Ferenci
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2013-05-16       Impact factor: 10.302

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.