Cheating, facilitation and cooperation regulate the effectiveness of phage-encoded exotoxins as antipredator molecules

欺骗、促进和合作调节噬菌体编码外毒素作为抗捕食分子的有效性。

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Abstract

Temperate phage encoded Shiga toxin (Stx) kills the bacterivorous predator, Tetrahymena thermophila, providing Stx(+) Escherichia coli with a survival advantage over Stx(-) cells. Although bacterial death accompanies Stx release, since bacteria grow clonally the fitness benefits of predator killing accrue to the kin of the sacrificed organism, meaning Stx-mediated protist killing is a form of self-destructive cooperation. We show here that the fitness benefits of Stx production are not restricted to the kin of the phage-encoding bacteria. Instead, nearby "free loading" bacteria, irrespective of their genotype, also reap the benefit of Stx-mediated predator killing. This finding indicates that the phage-borne Stx exotoxin behaves as a public good. Stx is encoded by a mobile phage. We find that Stx-encoding phage can use susceptible bacteria in the population as surrogates to enhance toxin and phage production. Moreover, our findings also demonstrate that engulfment and concentration of Stx-encoding and susceptible Stx(-) bacteria in the Tetrahymena phagosome enhances the transfer of Stx-encoding temperate phage from the host to the susceptible bacteria. This transfer increases the population of cooperating bacteria within the community. Since these bacteria now encode Stx, the predation-stimulated increase in phage transfer increases the population of toxin encoding bacteria in the environment.

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