Pleiotropic hubs drive bacterial surface competition through parallel changes in colony composition and expansion
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Date
2023-10Type
- Journal Article
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yes
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Abstract
AU Bacteria: Pleaseconfirmthatallheadinglevelsarerepresentedcorrectly commonly adhere to surfaces where they compete: for both space and resources. Despite the importance of surface growth, it remains largely elusive how bacteria evolve on surfaces. We previously performed an evolution experiment where we evolved distinct Bacilli populations under a selective regime that favored colony spreading. In just a few weeks, colonies of Bacillus subtilis showed strongly advanced expansion rates, increasing their radius 2.5-fold relative to that of the ancestor. Here, we investigate what drives their rapid evolution by performing a uniquely detailed analysis of the evolutionary changes in colony development. We find mutations in diverse global regulators, RicT, RNAse Y, and LexA, with strikingly similar pleiotropic effects: They lower the rate of sporulation and simultaneously facilitate colony expansion by either reducing extracellular polysaccharide production or by promoting filamentous growth. Combining both high-throughput flow cytometry and gene expression profiling, we show that regulatory mutations lead to highly reproducible and parallel changes in global gene expression, affecting approximatelyAU 45%: Pleasenoteth of all genes. This parallelism results from the coordinated manner by which regulators change activity both during colony development—in the transition from vegetative growth to dormancy—and over evolutionary time. This coordinated activity can however also break down, leading to evolutionary divergence. Altogether, we show how global regulators function as major pleiotropic hubs that drive rapid surface adaptation by mediating parallel changes in both colony composition and expansion, thereby massively reshaping gene expression. Show more
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https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000639022Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
PLoS BiologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
PLOSFunding
169978 - A microscale analysis of the causes and consequences of the spatial arrangement of biological functions in microbial consortia (SNF)
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