4.8 Article

Public good dynamics drive evolution of iron acquisition strategies in natural bacterioplankton populations

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1213344109

Keywords

microbial diversity; ocean bacteria; population structure; genome dynamics

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB 0821391]
  2. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
  3. Cooperative Agreement between the Masdar Institute of Science and Technology (Masdar Institute), Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
  4. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA [02/MI/MI/CP/11/07633/GEN/G/00]
  5. Center for Microbial Oceanography: Research and Education NSF Science and Technology Center Award [EF0424599]
  6. Broad Institute's Scientific Planning and Allocation of Resources Committee program

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A common strategy among microbes living in iron-limited environments is the secretion of siderophores, which can bind poorly soluble iron and make it available to cells via active transport mechanisms. Such siderophore-iron complexes can be thought of as public goods that can be exploited by local communities and drive diversification, for example by the evolution of cheating. However, it is unclear whether bacterial populations in the environment form stable enough communities such that social interactions significantly impact evolutionary dynamics. Here we show that public good games drive the evolution of iron acquisition strategies in wild populations of marine bacteria. We found that within nonclonal but ecologically cohesive genotypic clusters of closely related Vibrionaceae, only an intermediate percentage of genotypes are able to produce siderophores. Nonproducers within these clusters exhibited selective loss of siderophore biosynthetic pathways, whereas siderophore transport mechanisms were retained, suggesting that these nonproducers can act as cheaters that benefit from siderophore producers in their local environment. In support of this hypothesis, these nonproducers in iron-limited media suffer a significant decrease in growth, which can be alleviated by siderophores, presumably owing to the retention of transport mechanisms. Moreover, using ecological data of resource partitioning, we found that cheating coevolves with the ecological specialization toward association with larger particles in the water column, suggesting that these can harbor stable enough communities for dependencies among organisms to evolve.

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