Complex Ecotype Dynamics Evolve in Response to Fluctuating Resources
Article 2022 en
Authors
MB
Megan G. Behringer
WH
Wei-Chin Ho
JM
John C. Meraz
Abstract
1 min read
Despite regular feast and famine conditions representing an environmental pressure that is commonly encountered by microbial communities, the evolutionary outcomes of repeated cycles of feast and famine have been less studied. By experimentally evolving initially isogenic Escherichia coli populations to 10-day feast/famine cycles, we observed rapid diversification into ecotypes with evidence of bidirectional cross-feeding on costly resources and frequency-dependent fitness.
Alexandra L. McCully, Megan G. Behringer, Jennifer R. Gliessman, Evgeny V. Pilipenko, Jeffrey L. Mazny, Michael E Lynch, D. Allan Drummond, James B. McKinlay
Alexandra L. McCully, Megan G. Behringer, Jennifer R. Gliessman, Evgeny V. Pilipenko, Jeffrey L. Mazny, Michael E Lynch, D. Allan Drummond, James B. McKinlay
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