Authors
Rene Niehus, Aurore Picot, Nuno M Oliveira, Sara Mitri, Kevin R Foster
Publication date
2017/6/1
Journal
Evolution
Volume
71
Issue
6
Pages
1443-1455
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc
Description
Microbes have the potential to be highly cooperative organisms. The archetype of microbial cooperation is often considered to be the secretion of siderophores, molecules scavenging iron, where cooperation is threatened by “cheater” genotypes that use siderophores without making them. Here, we show that this view neglects a key piece of biology: siderophores are imported by specific receptors that constrain their use by competing strains. We study the effect of this specificity in an ecoevolutionary model, in which we vary siderophore sharing among strains, and compare fully shared siderophores with private siderophores. We show that privatizing siderophores fundamentally alters their evolution. Rather than a canonical cooperative good, siderophores become a competitive trait used to pillage iron from other strains. We also study the physiological regulation of siderophores using in silico long-term …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Niehus, A Picot, NM Oliveira, S Mitri, KR Foster - Evolution, 2017