Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt Universitygrid.152326.1, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Department of Pathology Microbiology and Immunology, Vanderbilt Universitygrid.152326.1 Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
mBio. 2022 Jun 28;13(3):e0346721. doi: 10.1128/mbio.03467-21. Epub 2022 May 16.
Ecotypic diversification and its associated cooperative behaviors are frequently observed in natural microbial populations whose access to resources is often sporadic. However, the extent to which fluctuations in resource availability influence the emergence of cooperative ecotypes is not fully understood. To determine how exposure to repeated resource limitation affects the establishment and long-term maintenance of ecotypes in a structured environment, we followed 32 populations of Escherichia coli evolving to either 1-day or 10-day feast/famine cycles for 900 days. Population-level analysis revealed that compared to populations evolving to 1-day cycles, 10-day populations evolved increased biofilm density, higher parallelism in mutational targets, and increased mutation rates. As previous investigations of evolution in structured environments have identified biofilm formation as the earliest observable phenotype associated with diversification of ecotypes, we revived cultures midway through the evolutionary process and conducted additional genomic, transcriptional, and phenotypic analyses of clones isolated from these evolving populations. We found not only that 10-day feast/famine cycles support multiple ecotypes but also that these ecotypes exhibit cooperative behavior. Consistent with the black queen hypothesis, or evolution of cooperation by gene loss, transcriptomic evidence suggests the evolution of bidirectional cross-feeding behaviors based on essential resources. These results provide insight into how analogous cooperative relationships may emerge in natural microbial communities. Despite regular feast and famine conditions representing an environmental pressure that is commonly encountered by microbial communities, the evolutionary outcomes of repeated cycles of feast and famine have been less studied. By experimentally evolving initially isogenic Escherichia coli populations to 10-day feast/famine cycles, we observed rapid diversification into ecotypes with evidence of bidirectional cross-feeding on costly resources and frequency-dependent fitness. Although unidirectional cross-feeding has been repeatedly observed to evolve in laboratory culture, most investigations of bidirectional cooperative behaviors in microbial populations have been conducted in engineered communities. This work demonstrates the evolution of black queen relationships in a microbial population originating from a single ancestor, providing a model for investigation of the eco-evolutionary processes leading to mutualistic cooperation.
生态型多样化及其相关的合作行为在自然微生物群体中经常观察到,这些微生物的资源获取往往是零星的。然而,资源可用性的波动在多大程度上影响合作生态型的出现还不完全清楚。为了确定资源限制的反复暴露如何影响结构化环境中生态型的建立和长期维持,我们跟踪了 32 个大肠杆菌种群的进化,这些种群分别经历了 1 天或 10 天的丰饶/饥荒循环,持续了 900 天。群体水平的分析表明,与进化到 1 天循环的种群相比,10 天种群进化出了更高的生物膜密度、突变靶点的更高平行性和更高的突变率。由于以前对结构化环境中的进化研究已经确定生物膜形成是与生态型多样化最早可观察到的表型相关,我们在进化过程中途复活了培养物,并对从这些进化种群中分离出的克隆进行了额外的基因组、转录组和表型分析。我们不仅发现 10 天的丰饶/饥荒循环支持多种生态型,而且这些生态型表现出合作行为。与黑皇后假说一致,即通过基因缺失进化合作,转录组证据表明基于必需资源的双向交叉喂养行为的进化。这些结果为自然微生物群落中类似的合作关系如何出现提供了见解。尽管定期的丰饶和饥荒条件代表了微生物群落经常面临的环境压力,但反复的丰饶和饥荒循环的进化结果研究较少。通过将最初的同质大肠杆菌种群实验进化为 10 天的丰饶/饥荒循环,我们观察到快速多样化为具有证据表明在昂贵资源上双向交叉喂养和频率相关适应性的生态型。虽然单向交叉喂养在实验室培养中反复观察到进化,但微生物种群中双向合作行为的大多数研究都是在工程化群落中进行的。这项工作证明了黑皇后关系在起源于单个祖先的微生物群体中的进化,为调查导致互利合作的生态进化过程提供了一个模型。