Authors
Jakob Russel, Henriette L Røder, Jonas S Madsen, Mette Burmølle, Søren J Sørensen
Publication date
2017/10/3
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
114
Issue
40
Pages
10684-10688
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
In the Origin of Species, Charles R. Darwin [Darwin C (1859) On the Origin of Species] proposed that the struggle for existence must be most intense among closely related species by means of their functional similarity. It has been hypothesized that this similarity, which results in resource competition, is the driver of the evolution of antagonism among bacteria. Consequently, antagonism should mostly be prevalent among phylogenetically and metabolically similar species. We tested the hypothesis by screening for antagonism among all possible pairwise interactions between 67 bacterial species from 8 different environments: 2,211 pairs of species and 4,422 interactions. We found a clear association between antagonism and phylogenetic distance, antagonism being most likely among closely related species. We determined two metabolic distances between our strains: one by scoring their growth on various …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Russel, HL Røder, JS Madsen, M Burmølle… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2017