Litcius/Paper detail

Survival of the weakest in non-transitive asymmetric interactions among strains of E. coli

Michael J. Liao, Arianna Miano, Chloe Nguyen, Lin Chao, Jeff Hasty

2020Nature Communications39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hierarchical organization in ecology, whereby interactions are nested in a manner that leads to a dominant species, naturally result in the exclusion of all but the dominant competitor. Alternatively, non-hierarchical competitive dynamics, such as cyclical interactions, can sustain biodiversity. Here, we designed a simple microbial community with three strains of E. coli that cyclically interact through (i) the inhibition of protein production, (ii) the digestion of genomic DNA, and (iii) the disruption of the cell membrane. We find that intrinsic differences in these three major mechanisms of bacterial warfare lead to an unbalanced community that is dominated by the weakest strain. We also use a computational model to describe how the relative toxin strengths, initial fractional occupancies, and spatial patterns affect the maintenance of biodiversity. The engineering of active warfare between microbial species establishes a framework for exploration of the underlying principles that drive complex ecological interactions.

Topics & Concepts

Transitive relationBiologyGeneticsComputational biologyComputer scienceCombinatoricsMathematicsEvolution and Genetic DynamicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperationthermodynamics and calorimetric analyses