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      Transposable temperate phages promote the evolution of divergent social strategies in Pseudomonas aeruginosa populations

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          Abstract

          Transposable temperate phages randomly insert into bacterial genomes, providing increased supply and altered spectra of mutations available to selection, thus opening alternative evolutionary trajectories. Transposable phages accelerate bacterial adaptation to new environments, but their effect on adaptation to the social environment is unclear. Using experimental evolution of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in iron-limited and iron-rich environments, where the cost of producing cooperative iron-chelating siderophores is high and low, respectively, we show that transposable phages promote divergence into extreme siderophore production phenotypes. Iron-limited populations with transposable phages evolved siderophore over-producing clones alongside siderophore non-producing cheats. Low siderophore production was associated with parallel mutations in pvdgenes, encoding pyoverdine biosynthesis, and pqs genes, encoding quinolone signaling, while high siderophore production was associated with parallel mutations in phenazine-associated gene clusters. Notably, some of these parallel mutations were caused by phage insertional inactivation. These data suggest that transposable phages, which are widespread in microbial communities, can mediate the evolutionary divergence of social strategies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Access Microbiology
          acmi
          acmi
          Access Microbiology
          acmi
          Microbiology Society
          2516-8290
          January 2020
          31 January 2020
          : 2
          : 1
          : 25
          Affiliations
          [1] University of Liverpool , Liverpool, United Kingdom
          [2] University of Zurich , Zurich, Switzerland
          [3] University of Sheffield , Sheffield, United Kingdom
          Author notes
          * Correspondence: Siobhan O'Brien, siobhan.o-brien@ 123456liverpool.ac.uk
          Article
          acmi.mim2019.po0004
          10.1099/acmi.mim2019.po0004
          758c036a-bde5-432e-9693-daec6f868b17
          © 2020 The Authors

          This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.

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          Categories
          Oral Abstract
          Abstracts from the Microbes in Medicine Meeting 2019
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          Quantitative & Systems biology,Parasitology,Molecular biology,Biotechnology,Infectious disease & Microbiology,Microbiology & Virology

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