wrinkly-spreader fitness in the two-dimensional agar plate microcosm maladaptation, compensation and ecological successwrinkly-spreader健身不适应二维琼脂板的缩影,补偿和生态的成功.pdf
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Wrinkly-Spreader Fitness in the Two-Dimensional Agar
Plate Microcosm: Maladaptation, Compensation and
Ecological Success
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Andrew J. Spiers *
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
Bacterial adaptation to new environments often leads to the establishment of new genotypes with significantly altered
phenotypes. In the Wrinkly Spreader (WS), ecological success in static liquid microcosms was through the rapid colonisation of
the air-liquid interface by the production of a cellulose-based biofilm. Rapid surface spreading was also seen on agar plates,
but in this two-dimensional environment the WS appears maladapted and rapidly reverts to the ancestral smooth (SM)-like
colony genotype. In this work, the fitness of WS relative to SM in mixed colonies was found to be low, confirming the WS
instability on agar plates. By examining defined WS mutants, the maladaptive characteristic was found to be the expression of
cellulose. SM-like revertants had a higher growth rate than WS and no longer expressed significant amounts of cellulose,
further confirming that the expression of this high-cost polymer was the basis of maladaptation and the target of
compensatory mutation in developing colonies. However, examination of the fate of WS-founded populations in either
multiple-colony or single mega-colony agar plate microcosms demonstrated that the loss of WS lineages could be reduced
under conditions in which the rapid spreading colony phenotype could dominate nutrient and oxygen access more effectively
than competing SM/SM-like genotypes. WS-like isolates recovered from such populations showed increased WS phenotype
stability as well as changes in the degree of colony spreading, confirming that the WS was adapting to the two-dimensional
agar plate microcosm.
Citation: Spiers AJ (2007) Wrinkly-Spreade
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