Bacterial populations can evolve and adapt to become diverse niche specialists, even in seemingly homogeneous environments. One source of this diversity arises from newly 'constructed' niches that result from the activities of the bacteria themselves. Ecotypes specialized to exploit these distinct niches can subsequently coexist via frequency-dependent interactions. Here, we describe a novel form of niche construction that is based upon differential death and cannibalism, and which evolved during 20 000 generations of experimental evolution in Escherichia coli in a seasonal environment with alternating growth and starvation. In one of 12 populations, two monophyletic ecotypes, S and L, evolved that stably coexist with one another. When grow...
ABSTRACT The amount of natural resources in the Earth’s environment is in flux, which can trigger ca...
Metagenomics and advances in molecular biology methods have enhanced knowledge of microbial evolutio...
Bacteria frequently lose biosynthetic genes, thus making them dependent on an environmental uptake o...
Bacterial populations can evolve and adapt to become diverse niche specialists, even in seemingly ho...
International audienceAbstract Bacterial populations can evolve and adapt to become diverse niche sp...
International audienceMetabolic cross-feeding interactions between microbial strains are common in n...
Hypothesis: Seasonal variation in availability of resources maintains co-existence between different...
International audienceStable bacterial cross-feeding interactions, where one strain feeds on the was...
Microorganisms modify their environment by excreting by-products of metabolism, which can create new...
<div><p>Microorganisms modify their environment by excreting by-products of metabolism, which can cr...
Abstract Evolution of complex communities of coexisting microbes remains poorly understood. The long...
Following intermittent batch growth in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth for about 1000 generations, differen...
<div><p>Bacteria frequently lose biosynthetic genes, thus making them dependent on an environmental ...
International audienceClosely related organisms usually occupy similar ecological niches, leading to...
AbstractPredatory behavior, a property associated with ecosystems, is not commonly observed in micro...
ABSTRACT The amount of natural resources in the Earth’s environment is in flux, which can trigger ca...
Metagenomics and advances in molecular biology methods have enhanced knowledge of microbial evolutio...
Bacteria frequently lose biosynthetic genes, thus making them dependent on an environmental uptake o...
Bacterial populations can evolve and adapt to become diverse niche specialists, even in seemingly ho...
International audienceAbstract Bacterial populations can evolve and adapt to become diverse niche sp...
International audienceMetabolic cross-feeding interactions between microbial strains are common in n...
Hypothesis: Seasonal variation in availability of resources maintains co-existence between different...
International audienceStable bacterial cross-feeding interactions, where one strain feeds on the was...
Microorganisms modify their environment by excreting by-products of metabolism, which can create new...
<div><p>Microorganisms modify their environment by excreting by-products of metabolism, which can cr...
Abstract Evolution of complex communities of coexisting microbes remains poorly understood. The long...
Following intermittent batch growth in Luria-Bertani (LB) broth for about 1000 generations, differen...
<div><p>Bacteria frequently lose biosynthetic genes, thus making them dependent on an environmental ...
International audienceClosely related organisms usually occupy similar ecological niches, leading to...
AbstractPredatory behavior, a property associated with ecosystems, is not commonly observed in micro...
ABSTRACT The amount of natural resources in the Earth’s environment is in flux, which can trigger ca...
Metagenomics and advances in molecular biology methods have enhanced knowledge of microbial evolutio...
Bacteria frequently lose biosynthetic genes, thus making them dependent on an environmental uptake o...