Ecological conditions enabling the evolution of the multiplicity of infection dependent lysogenic decision of phage lambda

ORAL

Abstract

Theories on phage lambda's lysogenic decision suggest that by allocating a subpopulation of infections to the dormant lysogenic state, survival of the population is ensured through uncertain deleterious environments. For lambda, lysogenization increases with the number of infecting phages, a quantity called the multiplicity of infection or MOI. However, theory predicts enhanced survival if lysogenization was independent of, or decreased with, MOI so long as some percentage of infections result in lysogeny. Using agent-based modeling, we compete phage strains with different MOI-dependencies against each other in variable environments. We discover that certain MOI-dependencies can be naturally selected over others, suggesting that evolution quantitatively tuned lambda's MOI-dependence to maximize survival.

Presenters

  • Michael Cortes

    Laufer Center for Physical and Quantitative Biology, State Univ of NY- Stony Brook

Authors

  • Michael Cortes

    Laufer Center for Physical and Quantitative Biology, State Univ of NY- Stony Brook

  • Gabor Balazsi

    Laufer Center for Physical and Quantitative Biology, State Univ of NY- Stony Brook, Laufer Center for Physical & Quantitative Biology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook University

  • Jonathan Krog

    Laufer Center for Physical and Quantitative Biology, State Univ of NY- Stony Brook