Mutation rate and cooperation have important ecological and evolutionary consequences and, moreover, can affect pathogen virulence. While hypermutability accelerates adaptation to novel environments, hypermutable lineages (‘mutators’) are selected against in well-adapted populations. Using the model organism Pseudomonas aeruginosa, we previously demonstrated a further potential disadvantage to hypermutability, namely, that it can accelerate the breakdown of cooperation. We now investigate how this property of mutators can affect their persistence in metapopulations. Mutator and wild-type bacteria were competed for 250 generations in globally competing metapopulations, imposing conditions of high or low intra-deme relatedness. High relatedne...
Explaining cooperation is a challenge for evolutionary biology [1, 2]. Surprisingly, the role of ext...
Population bottlenecks are assumed to play a key role in the maintenance of social traits in microbe...
International audienceThe fitness consequences of deleterious mutations are sometimes greater when i...
SummaryWhen the supply of beneficial mutations limits adaptation, bacterial mutator alleles can reac...
When the supply of beneficial mutations limits adaptation, bacterial mutator alleles can reach high ...
Understanding the ecological, evolutionary and genetic factors that affect the expression of coopera...
Once acquired, hypermutation is unrelenting, and in the long-term, leads to impaired fitness due to ...
Many bacterial populations harbour substantial numbers of hypermutable bacteria, in spite of hypermu...
Mutator bacteria are frequently found in natural populations of bacteria and although coevolution wi...
Bacteria with greatly elevated mutation rates ( mutators) are frequently found in natural(1-3) and l...
Bacteria produce a range of molecules that are secreted from the cell and can provide a benefit to t...
Hamilton's inclusive fitness theory provides a leading explanation for the problem of cooperation. A...
Explaining cooperation is a challenge for evolutionary biology. Surprisingly, the role of extrinsic ...
SummaryExplaining cooperation is a challenge for evolutionary biology [1, 2]. Surprisingly, the role...
International audienceMutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution. Unders...
Explaining cooperation is a challenge for evolutionary biology [1, 2]. Surprisingly, the role of ext...
Population bottlenecks are assumed to play a key role in the maintenance of social traits in microbe...
International audienceThe fitness consequences of deleterious mutations are sometimes greater when i...
SummaryWhen the supply of beneficial mutations limits adaptation, bacterial mutator alleles can reac...
When the supply of beneficial mutations limits adaptation, bacterial mutator alleles can reach high ...
Understanding the ecological, evolutionary and genetic factors that affect the expression of coopera...
Once acquired, hypermutation is unrelenting, and in the long-term, leads to impaired fitness due to ...
Many bacterial populations harbour substantial numbers of hypermutable bacteria, in spite of hypermu...
Mutator bacteria are frequently found in natural populations of bacteria and although coevolution wi...
Bacteria with greatly elevated mutation rates ( mutators) are frequently found in natural(1-3) and l...
Bacteria produce a range of molecules that are secreted from the cell and can provide a benefit to t...
Hamilton's inclusive fitness theory provides a leading explanation for the problem of cooperation. A...
Explaining cooperation is a challenge for evolutionary biology. Surprisingly, the role of extrinsic ...
SummaryExplaining cooperation is a challenge for evolutionary biology [1, 2]. Surprisingly, the role...
International audienceMutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution. Unders...
Explaining cooperation is a challenge for evolutionary biology [1, 2]. Surprisingly, the role of ext...
Population bottlenecks are assumed to play a key role in the maintenance of social traits in microbe...
International audienceThe fitness consequences of deleterious mutations are sometimes greater when i...