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Are
Sacrificial Bacteria Altruistic or Just Unlucky?
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Genetic study finds
chance helps determine fate of B. subtilis bacteria
An investigation of the genes
that govern spore formation in the bacteria B. subtilis shows
that chance plays a significant role in determining which of the
microbes sacrifice themselves for the colony and which go on to
form spores. B. subtilis, a common soil bacteria, is
a well-known survivor. When running short of food, it can
alternatively band together in colonies or encase itself in a
tough, protective spore to wait for better times. In fact, B.
subtilis is so good at making spores that it's often used as a
model organism by biologists who study bacterial spore
formation. "It's too early to say whether B.
subtilis is truly altruistic," said co-author Oleg Igoshin,
assistant professor of bioengineering at Rice University. "What
is clear from this is that not all bacteria are going to look and
act the same, and that's something that can be overlooked when
people either study or attempt to control bacteria with
population-wide approaches." For example,
Igoshin said doctors and food safety engineers might need to
amend general approaches aimed at controlling bacteria with more
targeted methods that also account for the uncharacteristic
individual. The new results appear in the April 15
issue of Molecular Systems Biology. The experimental work, which
was done by Jan-Willem Veening, currently at Newcastle
University, and by other members of Oscar Kuipers' research group
at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands, focused on the
B. subtilis genes that regulate both spore formation and the
production cycles of two proteins -- subtilisin and
bacillopeptidase. These two proteins help break apart dead cells
and convert them into food. They are produced and released into
the surrounding environment by B. subtilis cells that are running
low on food. From previous studies, scientists know
there is some overlap between genes that control the production
of the two proteins and those that control spore
formation. "Only a portion of the bacteria in a
colony will form spores and only portion of the bacteria produce
subtilisin, and we were interested in probing the genetic basis
for this," Igoshin said. "How is it decided which cells
become spores and which don't?" Igoshin, a
computational biologist, used computer simulations to help
decipher and interpret the team's experimental results. He said
the team found that fewer than 30 percent of individuals in a
colony produce large quantities of the food-converting proteins.
Even though the proteins benefit all members of the colony and
help some cells to become spores, the cells that produce the
proteins in bulk do not form spores themselves. "There's
a feedback loop, so that cells that start producing the proteins
early get a reinforced signal to keep making them," Igoshin
said. "We found that it's probabilistic events -- chance, if
you will -- that dictates who is early and who is late. The early
ones start working for the benefit of everyone while the later
ones save valuable resources to ensure successful completion of
sporulation program. Many cells will end up committing to
sporulation before they had a chance to contribute to protease
production" Igoshin said a key piece of
evidence confirming modeling predictions came in experiments that
tracked genetically identical sister cells, some of which became
protein producers and some of which didn't. The
research was supported by the Netherlands Organization of
Scientific Research, the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and
Sciences, the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research
Council, the Wellcome Trust and Rice University. Co-authors also
include Robyn Eijlander and Reindert Nijland of the University of
Groningen, and Leendert Hamoen of Newcastle University in Great
Britain.
Source: Rice University / Jade
Boyd
Permalink:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/unv_science/p389_97.html
Time Stamp: 4/16/2008 at
9:07:09 PM CST
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