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Genetic architecture constrains exploitation of siderophore cooperation in the bacterium Burkholderia cenocepacia
Author(s) -
Sathe Santosh,
Mathew Anugraha,
Agnoli Kirsty,
Eberl Leo,
Kümmerli Rolf
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
evolution letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2056-3744
DOI - 10.1002/evl3.144
Subject(s) - burkholderia cenocepacia , siderophore , biology , cheating , burkholderia , bacteria , operon , genetics , pseudomonas , gene , microbiology and biotechnology , computational biology , mutant , evolutionary biology
Explaining how cooperation can persist in the presence of cheaters, exploiting the cooperative acts, is a challenge for evolutionary biology. Microbial systems have proved extremely useful to test evolutionary theory and identify mechanisms maintaining cooperation. One of the most widely studied system is the secretion and sharing of iron‐scavenging siderophores by Pseudomonas bacteria, with many insights gained from this system now being considered as hallmarks of bacterial cooperation. Here, we introduce siderophore secretion by the bacterium Burkholderia cenocepacia H111 as a novel parallel study system, and show that this system behaves differently. For ornibactin, the main siderophore of this species, we discovered a novel mechanism of how cheating can be prevented. Particularly, we found that secreted ornibactin cannot be exploited by ornibactin‐defective mutants because ornibactin receptor and synthesis genes are co‐expressed from the same operon, such that disruptive mutations in synthesis genes compromise receptor availability required for siderophore uptake and cheating. For pyochelin, the secondary siderophore of this species, we found that cheating was possible, but the relative success of cheaters was positive frequency dependent, thus diametrically opposite to the Pseudomonas and other microbial systems. Altogether, our results highlight that expanding our repertoire of microbial study systems leads to new discoveries and suggest that there is an enormous diversity of social interactions out there in nature, and we might have only looked at the tip of the iceberg so far.

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