4.7 Article

Size evolution in microorganisms masks trade-offs predicted by the growth rate hypothesis

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2016.2272

关键词

bacteria; growth rate hypothesis; stoichiometry; experimental evolution; r/K strategies; Pseudomonas fluorescens

资金

  1. Conseil Scientifique de l'Universite Montpellier 2 [AAP2011]
  2. CNRS: 'Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique' (NOE project of Ec2Co programme: 'Emergence et structure de la niche stoechiome metrique chez les microorganismes')
  3. Frontenac programme (FQRNT and French consulate at Quebec)
  4. French Ministry of Research and Technology

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Adaptation to local resource availability depends on responses in growth rate and nutrient acquisition. The growth rate hypothesis (GRH) suggests that growing fast should impair competitive abilities for phosphorus and nitrogen due to high demand for biosynthesis. However, in microorganisms, size influences both growth and uptake rates, which may mask trade-offs and instead generate a positive relationship between these traits (size hypothesis, SH). Here, we evolved a gradient of maximum growth rate (mu(max)) from a single bacterium ancestor to test the relationship among mu(max), competitive ability for nutrients and cell size, while controlling for evolutionary history. We found a strong positive correlation between mu(max) and competitive ability for phosphorus, associated with a trade-off between mu(max) and cell size: strains selected for high mu(max) were smaller and better competitors for phosphorus. Our results strongly support the SH, while the trade-offs expected under GRH were not apparent. Beyond plasticity, unicellular populations can respond rapidly to selection pressure through joint evolution of their size and maximum growth rate. Our study stresses that physiological links between these traits tightly shape the evolution of competitive strategies.

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