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Increased privatization of a public resource leads to spread of cooperation in a microbial population.

Namratha RajSupreet Saini
Published in: Microbiology spectrum (2024)
How is cooperation, as a trait, maintained in a population? In order to answer this question, we perform a coevolution experiment between two strains of yeast-one which produces a public good to release glucose and fructose in the media, thus generating a public resource, and the other which does not produce public resource and merely benefits from the presence of the cooperator strain. What is the outcome of this coevolution experiment? We demonstrate that after ~200 generations of coevolution, cooperators increase in frequency in the co-culture. Remarkably, in all parallel lines of our experiment, this is obtained via duplication of regions which likely allow greater privatization of glucose and fructose. Thus, increased privatization, which is intuitively thought to be a strategy against cooperation, enables spread of cooperation.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • escherichia coli
  • blood glucose
  • microbial community
  • adverse drug
  • gene expression
  • emergency department
  • genome wide
  • blood pressure
  • insulin resistance
  • weight loss