4.7 Article

An Optimal Lysis Time Maximizes Bacteriophage Fitness in Quasi-Continuous Culture

Journal

MBIO
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mbio.03593-21

Keywords

adaptation; bacteriophage lambda; event timing; holin; life history traits; optimization; timing of reproduction

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1R01GM124446-01]

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Optimality models have had a complex history in evolutionary biology. In this study, researchers revisit evolutionary optimization by examining the lysis time of a bacteriophage. The results show that natural selection has led to an optimal lysis time that maximizes progeny production. This finding is important for understanding the genetic constraints and tradeoffs in organismal evolution.
Optimality models have a checkered history in evolutionary biology. While optimality models have been successful in providing valuable insight into the evolution of a wide variety of biological traits, a common objection is that optimality models are overly simplistic and ignore organismal genetics. We revisit evolutionary optimization in the context of a major bacteriophage life history trait, lysis time. Lysis time refers to the period spanning phage infection of a host cell and its lysis, whereupon phage progenies are released. Lysis time, therefore, directly determines phage fecundity assuming progeny assembly does not exhaust host resources prior to lysis. Noting that previous tests of lysis time optimality rely on batch culture, we implemented a quasi-continuous culture system to observe productivity of a panel of isogenic phage lambda genotypes differing in lysis time. We report that under our experimental conditions, lambda phage productivity is maximized around optimal lysis times ranging from 60 to 100 min, and lambda wildtype strain falls within this range. It would appear that natural selection on phage lambda lysis time uncovered a set of genetic solutions that optimized progeny production in its ecological milieu relative to alternative genotypes. We discuss this finding in light of recent results that lysis time variation is also minimized in the strains with lysis times closer to the lambda wild-type strain. IMPORTANCE Optimality theory presents the idea that natural selection acts on organismal traits to produce genotypes that maximize organismal survival and reproduction. As such, optimality theory is a valuable tool in guiding our understanding of the genetic constraints and tradeoffs organisms experience as their genotypes are selected to produce optimal solutions to biological problems. However, optimality theory is often critiqued as being overly simplistic and ignoring the roles of chance and history in the evolution of organismal traits. We show here that the wild-type genotype of a popular laboratory model organism, the bacteriophage lambda, produces a phenotype for a major life history trait, lysis time, that maximizes the reproductive success of bearers of that genotype relative to other possible genotypes. This result demonstrates, as is rarely shown experimentally, that natural selection can achieve optimal solutions to ecological challenges. Optimality theory presents the idea that natural selection acts on organismal traits to produce genotypes that maximize organismal survival and reproduction. As such, optimality theory is a valuable tool in guiding our understanding of the genetic constraints and tradeoffs organisms experience as their genotypes are selected to produce optimal solutions to biological problems.

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