The evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteria

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Stochastic phenotype switching – or bet hedging – is a pervasive feature of living systems and common in bacteria that experience fluctuating (unpredictable) environmental conditions. Under such conditions, the capacity to generate variable offspring spreads the...

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Main Authors: Libby Eric, Gallie Jenna, Kost Christian, Ferguson Gayle C, Beaumont Hubertus JE, Rainey Paul B, Zhang Xue-Xian
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-08-01
Series:Microbial Cell Factories
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spelling doaj-f0779ba791834062bdad0156654eb2462020-11-24T23:49:11ZengBMCMicrobial Cell Factories1475-28592011-08-0110Suppl 1S1410.1186/1475-2859-10-S1-S14The evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteriaLibby EricGallie JennaKost ChristianFerguson Gayle CBeaumont Hubertus JERainey Paul BZhang Xue-Xian<p>Abstract</p> <p>Stochastic phenotype switching – or bet hedging – is a pervasive feature of living systems and common in bacteria that experience fluctuating (unpredictable) environmental conditions. Under such conditions, the capacity to generate variable offspring spreads the risk of being maladapted in the present environment, against offspring likely to have some chance of survival in the future. While a rich subject for theoretical studies, little is known about the selective causes responsible for the evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching. Here we review recent work – both theoretical and experimental – that sheds light on ecological factors that favour switching types over non-switching types. Of particular relevance is an experiment that provided evidence for an adaptive origin of stochastic phenotype switching by subjecting bacterial populations to a selective regime that mimicked essential features of the host immune response. Central to the emergence of switching types was frequent imposition of ‘exclusion rules’ and ‘population bottlenecks’ – two complementary faces of frequency dependent selection. While features of the immune response, exclusion rules and bottlenecks are likely to operate in many natural environments. Together these factors define a set of selective conditions relevant to the evolution of stochastic switching, including antigenic variation and bacterial persistence.</p>
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Libby Eric
Gallie Jenna
Kost Christian
Ferguson Gayle C
Beaumont Hubertus JE
Rainey Paul B
Zhang Xue-Xian
spellingShingle Libby Eric
Gallie Jenna
Kost Christian
Ferguson Gayle C
Beaumont Hubertus JE
Rainey Paul B
Zhang Xue-Xian
The evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteria
Microbial Cell Factories
author_facet Libby Eric
Gallie Jenna
Kost Christian
Ferguson Gayle C
Beaumont Hubertus JE
Rainey Paul B
Zhang Xue-Xian
author_sort Libby Eric
title The evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteria
title_short The evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteria
title_full The evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteria
title_fullStr The evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteria
title_full_unstemmed The evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteria
title_sort evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching in bacteria
publisher BMC
series Microbial Cell Factories
issn 1475-2859
publishDate 2011-08-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Stochastic phenotype switching – or bet hedging – is a pervasive feature of living systems and common in bacteria that experience fluctuating (unpredictable) environmental conditions. Under such conditions, the capacity to generate variable offspring spreads the risk of being maladapted in the present environment, against offspring likely to have some chance of survival in the future. While a rich subject for theoretical studies, little is known about the selective causes responsible for the evolutionary emergence of stochastic phenotype switching. Here we review recent work – both theoretical and experimental – that sheds light on ecological factors that favour switching types over non-switching types. Of particular relevance is an experiment that provided evidence for an adaptive origin of stochastic phenotype switching by subjecting bacterial populations to a selective regime that mimicked essential features of the host immune response. Central to the emergence of switching types was frequent imposition of ‘exclusion rules’ and ‘population bottlenecks’ – two complementary faces of frequency dependent selection. While features of the immune response, exclusion rules and bottlenecks are likely to operate in many natural environments. Together these factors define a set of selective conditions relevant to the evolution of stochastic switching, including antigenic variation and bacterial persistence.</p>
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