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Leave or Stay: Simulating Motility and Fitness of Microorganisms in Dynamic Aquatic Ecosystems

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Motile bacteria are widespread in various water ecosystems along with nonmotile species, which posits the question: what makes motility an advantage in such habitats, and under what conditions? This simulation study addresses these problems using a computer model of competition of tw...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Klimenko, Alexandra, Matushkin, Yury, Kolchanov, Nikolay, Lashin, Sergey
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8533222/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34681118
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10101019
Descripción
Sumario:SIMPLE SUMMARY: Motile bacteria are widespread in various water ecosystems along with nonmotile species, which posits the question: what makes motility an advantage in such habitats, and under what conditions? This simulation study addresses these problems using a computer model of competition of two microbial species: Nomad of a motile population and Settler of a sedentary one. We simulated their competition under various environmental conditions such as the nutrient availability and frequency of changes in the location of the nutrient source as well as depending on some population parameters determining how much energy it takes for a bacterium to migrate and what the effect of density-dependent mortality is on the outcome of Settler vs. Nomad competition. We showed that dynamic and nutrient-scarce environments favour motile populations, whereas nutrient-rich and stagnant environments promote sedentary microorganisms. Moreover, the energetic costs of migration determine whether or not the motile population outcompetes the sedentary one, though it also depends on such conditions as nutrient availability. There is also another way for Settler to succeed even without penalties for migration—by grasping an opportunity to occupy the nutrient source, bringing about a biotic desert around it, which cannot be overcome by Nomad constantly searching for locally optimal conditions. ABSTRACT: Motility is a key adaptation factor in scarce marine environments inhabited by bacteria. The question of how a capacity for adaptive migrations influences the success of a microbial population in various conditions is a challenge addressed in this study. We employed the agent-based model of competition of motile and sedentary microbial populations in a confined aquatic environment supplied with a periodic batch nutrient source to assess the fitness of both. Such factors as nutrient concentration in a batch, batch period, mortality type and energetic costs of migration were considered to determine the conditions favouring different strategies: Nomad of a motile population and Settler of a sedentary one. The modelling results demonstrate that dynamic and nutrient-scarce environments favour motile populations, whereas nutrient-rich and stagnant environments promote sedentary microorganisms. Energetic costs of migration determine whether or not the Nomad strategy of the motile population is successful, though it also depends on such conditions as nutrient availability. Even without penalties for migration, under certain conditions, the sedentary Settler population dominates in the ecosystem. It is achieved by decreasing the local nutrient availability near the nutrient source, as motile populations relying on a local optimizing strategy tend to follow benign conditions and fail, enduring stress associated with crossing the valleys of suboptimal nutrient availability.