Document Type
Article
Keywords
disease biology, evolutionary theory, microbial biology, social evolution, virulence
Abstract
Invading an occupied niche is a formidable ecological challenge, and one of particular human importance in the context of food-borne microbial pathogens. We discuss distinct categories of invader-triggered environmental change that facilitate invasion by emptying their niche of competitors. Evidence is reviewed that gut bacteria use such strategies to manipulate their environment (via bacteriocins, temperate phage viruses or immuno-manipulation) at the expense of their competitors are reviewed. The possible virulence implications of microbial warfare among multiple co-infecting strains are diverse. Killing competitors can reduce virulence by reducing overall microbial densities, or increase virulence if for example the allelopathic mechanism involves immunomanipulation. Finally, we place microbial anti-competitor strategies in a social evolution framework, highlighting how costly anti-competitor strategies can be understood as examples of microbial spite. We conclude by discussing other invasive species that have also developed such proactive strategies of invasion.
Publication Date
February 2009
Publication Title
Evolutionary Applications
Volume
2
Issue
1
First Page
32
Last Page
39
DOI
10.1111/j.1752-4571.2008.00059.x
Recommended Citation
Brown, Sam; Inglis, R; and Taddei, François, "Evolutionary Ecology of Microbial Wars: Within-Host Competition and (Incidental) Virulence" (2009). Biology Department Faculty Works. 77.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1752-4571.2008.00059.x
Available at:
https://irl.umsl.edu/biology-faculty/77