The Black Queen Hypothesis: A new evolutionary theory
WASHINGTON, DC -- March 27, 2012 -- Microorganisms can sometimes lose the ability to perform a
function that appears to be necessary for their survival, and yet they still
somehow manage to endure and multiply. How can this be? The authors of an
opinion piece appearing in mBio®,
the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology, on
March 27 explain their ideas about the matter. They say microbes that shed
necessary functions are getting others to do the hard work for them, an
adaptation that can encourage microorganisms to live in cooperative
communities.
The Black Queen Hypothesis, as they call it, puts forth the
idea that some of the needs of microorganisms can be met by other organisms,
enabling microbes that rely on one another to live more efficiently by paring
down the genes they have to carry around. In these cases, it would make
evolutionary sense for a microbe to lose a burdensome gene for a function it
doesn't have to perform for itself. The authors, Richard Lenski and J. Jeffrey
Morris of Michigan State University, and Erik Zinser of the University of
Tennessee, named the hypothesis for the queen of spades in the game Hearts, in
which the usual strategy is to avoid taking this card.
"It's a sweeping hypothesis for how free-living
microorganisms evolve to become dependent on each other," says Richard
Losick of Harvard University, who edited the paper. "The heart of the
hypothesis is that many genetic functions provide products that leak in and out
of cells and hence become public goods," he says.
As an illustration of the hypothesis, the authors apply it
to one particular microbial system that has been a source of some confusion:
one of the most common plankton species in the open ocean, Prochlorococcus, which has a much smaller genome than you might
expect. Scientists have wondered how Prochlorococcus
has managed to be extremely successful while shedding important genes,
including the gene for catalase-peroxidase, which allows it to neutralize hydrogen
peroxide, a compound that can damage or even kill cells. Prochlorococcus relies on the other microorganisms around it to
remove hydrogen peroxide from the environment, say the authors, allowing it to
fob off its responsibilities on the unlucky card holders around it. This is an
instance of how one species can profit from paring down while relying on other
members of the community to help out.
Losick says the Black Queen Hypothesis offers a new way of
looking at complicated, inter-dependent communities of microorganisms. "I
have a special interest in how bacteria form biofilms, complex natural
communities that often consist of many different kinds of bacteria. The Black
Queen Hypothesis provides a valuable new way to think about how the members of
these biofilm communities coevolved."
The article can be found online at http://mbio.asm.org/content/3/2/e00036-12
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mBio® is an open access online journal published by the
American Society for Microbiology to make microbiology research broadly
accessible. The focus of the journal is on rapid publication of cutting-edge
research spanning the entire spectrum of microbiology and related fields. It
can be found online athttp://mBio.asm.org.
The American Society for Microbiology is the largest single
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professionals. ASM's mission is to advance the microbiological sciences as a
vehicle for understanding life processes and to apply and communicate this
knowledge for the improvement of health and environmental and economic
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