The impact of natural transformation on adaptation in spatially structured bacterial populations
byDanesh Moradigaravand, Jan Engelstädter
Research ArticleYear:2014
Extra Information
BMC evolutionary biology, 14(1) 2-9
Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that natural transformation and the
formation of highly structured populations in bacteria are
interconnected. In spite of growing evidence about this connection,
little is known about the dynamics of natural transformation in
spatially structured bacterial populations. In this work, we model the
interdependency between the dynamics of the bacterial gene pool and
those of environmental DNA in space to dissect the effect of
transformation on adaptation. Our model reveals that even with only a
single locus under consideration, transformation with a free DNA
fragment pool results in complex adaptation dynamics that do not emerge
in previous models focusing only on the gene shuffling effect of
transformation at multiple loci. We demonstrate how spatial restriction
on population growth and DNA diffusion in the environment affect the
impact of transformation on adaptation. We found that in structured
bacterial populations intermediate DNA diffusion rates predominantly
cause transformation to impede adaptation by spreading deleterious
alleles in the population. Overall, our model highlights distinctive
evolutionary consequences of bacterial transformation in spatially
restricted compared to planktonic bacterial populations.