High Temperature and Bacteriophages Can Indirectly Select for Bacterial Pathogenicity in Environmental Reservoirs
Friman V-P, Hiltunen T, Jalasvuori M, Lindstedt C, Laanto E, et al. 2011 High Temperature and Bacteriophages Can Indirectly Select for Bacterial Pathogenicity in Environmental Reservoirs. PLoS ONE 6(3): e17651. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0017651
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© 2011 Friman et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
The coincidental evolution hypothesis predicts that traits connected to bacterial pathogenicity could be indirectly selected
outside the host as a correlated response to abiotic environmental conditions or different biotic species interactions. To
investigate this, an opportunistic bacterial pathogen, Serratia marcescens, was cultured in the absence and presence of the
lytic bacteriophage PPV (Podoviridae) at 25uC and 37uC for four weeks (N = 5). At the end, we measured changes in bacterial
phage-resistance and potential virulence traits, and determined the pathogenicity of all bacterial selection lines in the
Parasemia plantaginis insect model in vivo. Selection at 37uC increased bacterial motility and pathogenicity but only in the
absence of phages. Exposure to phages increased the phage-resistance of bacteria, and this was costly in terms of
decreased maximum population size in the absence of phages. However, this small-magnitude growth cost was not greater
with bacteria that had evolved in high temperature regime, and no trade-off was found between phage-resistance and
growth rate. As a result, phages constrained the evolution of a temperature-mediated increase in bacterial pathogenicity
presumably by preferably infecting the highly motile and virulent bacteria. In more general perspective, our results suggest
that the traits connected to bacterial pathogenicity could be indirectly selected as a correlated response by abiotic and
biotic factors in environmental reservoirs.
...
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