Reductive genomic evolution is common in endosymbiotic bacteria, where it is driven by genetic drift. Genome reduction is less common in free-living organisms, but it has occurred in the numerically dominant open-ocean bacterioplankton Prochlorococcus and Pelagibacter, and in these cases the reduction appears to be driven by natural selection rather than drift. The loss of certain genes in free-living organisms may leave them dependent on co-occurring microbes for the lost metabolic functions. We present the Black Queen Hypothesis (BQH), a novel theory of reductive evolution that explains how selection leads to such dependencies; its name refers to the queen of spades in the game Hearts, where the usual strategy is to avoid taking this card...
Although it is well established theoretically that selective interference among mutations (Hill-Robe...
System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenotypes from...
Bacteria that have adapted to nutrient-rich, stable environments are typically characterized by redu...
Reductive genomic evolution is common in endosymbiotic bacteria, where it is driven by genetic drift...
The Black Queen Hypothesis (BQH) was originally proposed to explain the dependence of some marine ba...
International audienceThe Black Queen Hypothesis, recently proposed to explain an evolution of depen...
With the two-fold cost of sex, derived asexual organisms have an immediate reproductive advantage ov...
The Black Queen hypothesis describes the evolutionary strategy to lose costly functions in favour of...
In a long-term evolution experiment with Escherichia coli, bacteria in one of twelve populations evo...
International audienceSome bacterial lineages seem to have undergone significant genome shrinkage ov...
As social interactions are increasingly recognized as important determinants of microbial fitness, s...
Mobile genetic elements such as conjugative plasmids are responsible for antibiotic resistant phenot...
Bacteria diversify into genetic clusters analogous to those observed in sexual eukaryotes, but the d...
Although it is well established theoretically that selective interference among mutations (Hill-Robe...
System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenotypes from...
Bacteria that have adapted to nutrient-rich, stable environments are typically characterized by redu...
Reductive genomic evolution is common in endosymbiotic bacteria, where it is driven by genetic drift...
The Black Queen Hypothesis (BQH) was originally proposed to explain the dependence of some marine ba...
International audienceThe Black Queen Hypothesis, recently proposed to explain an evolution of depen...
With the two-fold cost of sex, derived asexual organisms have an immediate reproductive advantage ov...
The Black Queen hypothesis describes the evolutionary strategy to lose costly functions in favour of...
In a long-term evolution experiment with Escherichia coli, bacteria in one of twelve populations evo...
International audienceSome bacterial lineages seem to have undergone significant genome shrinkage ov...
As social interactions are increasingly recognized as important determinants of microbial fitness, s...
Mobile genetic elements such as conjugative plasmids are responsible for antibiotic resistant phenot...
Bacteria diversify into genetic clusters analogous to those observed in sexual eukaryotes, but the d...
Although it is well established theoretically that selective interference among mutations (Hill-Robe...
System-level metabolic network models enable the computation of growth and metabolic phenotypes from...
Bacteria that have adapted to nutrient-rich, stable environments are typically characterized by redu...