Authors
Silja Heilmann, Kim Sneppen, Sandeep Krishna
Publication date
2012/7/31
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
109
Issue
31
Pages
12828-12833
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Bacteriophage are voracious predators of bacteria and a major determinant in shaping bacterial life strategies. Many phage species are virulent, meaning that infection leads to certain death of the host and immediate release of a large batch of phage progeny. Despite this apparent voraciousness, bacteria have stably coexisted with virulent phages for eons. Here, using individual-based stochastic spatial models, we study the conditions for achieving coexistence on the edge between two habitats, one of which is a bacterial refuge with conditions hostile to phage whereas the other is phage friendly. We show how bacterial density-dependent, or quorum-sensing, mechanisms such as the formation of biofilm can produce such refuges and edges in a self-organized manner. Coexistence on these edges exhibits the following properties, all of which are observed in real phage–bacteria ecosystems but difficult to achieve …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Heilmann, K Sneppen, S Krishna - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012