Authors
Dave Van Ditmarsch, Kerry E Boyle, Hassan Sakhtah, Jennifer E Oyler, Carey D Nadell, Éric Déziel, Lars EP Dietrich, Joao B Xavier
Publication date
2013/8/29
Journal
Cell reports
Volume
4
Issue
4
Pages
697-708
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Most bacteria in nature live in surface-associated communities rather than planktonic populations. Nonetheless, how surface-associated environments shape bacterial evolutionary adaptation remains poorly understood. Here, we show that subjecting Pseudomonas aeruginosa to repeated rounds of swarming, a collective form of surface migration, drives remarkable parallel evolution toward a hyperswarmer phenotype. In all independently evolved hyperswarmers, the reproducible hyperswarming phenotype is caused by parallel point mutations in a flagellar synthesis regulator, FleN, which locks the naturally monoflagellated bacteria in a multiflagellated state and confers a growth rate-independent advantage in swarming. Although hyperswarmers outcompete the ancestral strain in swarming competitions, they are strongly outcompeted in biofilm formation, which is an essential trait for P. aeruginosa in …
Total citations
201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024514171918721151114127