3.8 Article

Evaporation-induced hydrodynamics promote conjugation-mediated plasmid transfer in microbial populations

Journal

ISME COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 1, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s43705-021-00057-5

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21876095]
  2. Australian Research Council [FT170100196]
  3. Early Career Researcher Award at The University of Queensland
  4. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO
  5. Gravitation Grant SIAM) [024.002.002]
  6. European Research Council (ERC Synergy Grant Marix) [854088]
  7. NWO [016. Vidi.189.050]

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Evaporation-induced water flows can significantly increase plasmid conjugation and reduce cell-cell distances, despite causing lower expression levels of conjugation-related genes.
Conjugative plasmids bestow important traits to microbial communities, such as virulence, antibiotic resistance, pollutant biotransformation, and biotechnology-relevant functions. While the biological mechanisms and determinants of plasmid conjugation are well established, the underlying physical and ecological driving forces remain unclear. Microbial communities often inhabit unsaturated environments, such as soils and host surfaces (e.g., skin, teeth, leaves, roots), where water evaporation and associated small-scale hydrodynamic processes frequently occur at numerous air-water and solid-water interfaces. Here, we hypothesized that evaporation can induce water flows with profound effects on the spatial distribution and surface deposition of cells, and consequently on the extent of plasmid conjugation. Using droplet experiments with an antibiotic resistance-encoding plasmid, we show that evaporation-induced water flows reduce cell-cell distances and significantly increase the extent of plasmid conjugation. Counterintuitively, we found that evaporation results in lower expression levels of conjugation-related genes. This negative relationship between the extent of plasmid conjugation and the expression of conjugation-related genes could be attributed to increased conjugation efficiency during evaporation. This study provides new insights into the physical and ecological determinants of plasmid conjugation, with important implications for understanding the spread and proliferation of plasmid-encoded traits.

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