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Evolutionary rescue of bacterial populations by heterozygosity on multicopy plasmids

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Dewan,  Ian       
Research Group Stochastic Evolutionary Dynamics (Uecker), Department Theoretical Biology (Traulsen), Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Max Planck Society;

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Uecker,  Hildegard       
Research Group Stochastic Evolutionary Dynamics (Uecker), Department Theoretical Biology (Traulsen), Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Dewan, I., & Uecker, H. (submitted). Evolutionary rescue of bacterial populations by heterozygosity on multicopy plasmids.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000F-5F36-B
Abstract
Bacterial plasmids and other extrachromosomal DNA elements frequently carry genes with important fitness effects for their hosts. Multicopy plasmids can additionally carry distinct alleles of host-fitness-relevant genes on different plasmid copies, allowing for heterozygosity not possible for loci on haploid chromosomes. Plasmid-mediated heterozygosity may increase the fitness of bacterial cells in circumstances where there is an advantage to having multiple distinct alleles (heterozyogote advantage); however, plasmid-mediated heterozygosity is also subject to constant loss due to random segregation of plasmid copies on cell division. We analyze a multitype branching process model to study the evolution and maintenance of plasmid-mediated heterozygosity under a heterozygote advantage. We focus on an evolutionary rescue scenario in which a novel mutant allele on a plasmid must be maintained together with the wild-type allele to allow population persistance. We determine the probability of rescue and derive an analytical expression for the threshold on the fitness of heterozygotes required to overcome segregation and make rescue possible; this threshold decreases with increasing copy number of the plasmid. We further show that the formation of cointegrates from the fusion of plasmid copies increases the probability of rescue. Overall, our results provide a rigorous quantitative assessment of the conditions under which bacterial populations can adapt to multiple stressors through plasmid-mediated heterozygosity.