Colicin Diversity: a Result of Eco!evolutionary Dynamics
Publication date
1998-09-22
Authors
Pagie, L.
Hogeweg, P.
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Colicins are plasmids that are carried in Escherichia coli. They code for a toxic protein and
for proteins that confer on the host immunity against this toxin. When bacteria carry plasmids
their growth rate is reduced. At the same time, the production of toxins makes it possible
for colicinogenic bacteria to invade bacterium strains that are not immune. In natural
bacterium populations there is a high diversity of colicin types. The reason for the
maintenance of this diversity has been the subject of much recent debate.
We have studied a simple eco-evolutionary model of the interaction of bacteria with colicins
and show that high diversity of colicins is to be expected. We find two different dynamical
modes each with a high diversity: a hyperimmunity mode and a multitoxicity mode. Bacteria
are immune to most toxins in the first mode but in fact produce very few toxins. In the second
mode bacteria are immune only to those toxins that they actually produce. In the second
mode toxin levels per bacterium are much higher, whereas immunity levels per bacterium are
lower.