2
| | | | About Us Buy Reprints Advertise Contact Us Services _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Search Adam and His Eves < Home > Deadly, Tiny, and Ready For Its Close-up, Mr. DeMille August 25, 2004 Spite in a Petri Dish Spiteful bacteria. Two words you probably haven't heard together. Then again, you probably haven't heard of altruistic bacteria either, but both sorts of microbes are out there--and in many cases in you. Bacteria lead marvelously complicated social lives. As a group of University of Edinburgh biologists today in , a nasty bug called , which causes lung infections, dedicates a lot of energy to helping its fellow . The microbes need iron, which is hard for them to find in a usable form in our bodies. To overcome the shortage, can release special molecules called siderophiles that snatch up iron compounds and make them palatable to the microbe. It takes a lot of energy for the bacteria to make siderophiles, and they aren't guaranteed a return for the investment. Once a siderophile harvests some iron, any that happens to be near it can gulp it down. reported Nature Pseudomonas aeruginosa P. aeruginosa P. aeruginosa P. aeruginosa At first glance, this generosity shouldn't exist. Microbes that put a lot of energy into helping other microbes should become extinct--or, more exactly, the genes that produce generosity in them should become extinct. Biologists have discovered mutant that cheat--they don't produce siderophiles but still suck up siderophiles made by the do-gooders. It might seem as if the cheaters should wipe the do-gooders off the face of the Earth. The solution to this sort of puzzle--or at least one solution--is helping out family. Closely related microbes share the same genes. If a relative scoops up the iron and can reproduce, that's all the same for your genes. P. aeruginoa To test this hypothesis, the Edinburgh team ran an experiment. They filled twelve beakers with bacteria they produced from a single clone. While the bacteria were all closely related, half were cheaters and half were do-gooders. They let the bacteria feed, multiply, and compete with one another. Then they mixed the beakers together, and randomly chose some bacteria to start a new colony in twelve new beakers. More successful bacteria gradually became more common as they started new rounds. In the end, the researhers found--as they predicted--that these close relatives evolved into cooperators. The do-gooders wound up making up nearly 100% of the population. That didn't happen when the researchers put together two different clones in the same beakers. When the bacteria had less chance of helping relatives, the do-gooders wound up making up less than half of the population. But the biologists suspected that even families could turn on themselves. Mathematical models suggest that the benefit of helping relatives drops if relatives are crammed together too closely. They never get a free lunch--siderophiles produced by other, unrelated bacteria. Instead, all the benefits of consuming iron are offset by the cost of producing the siderophiles. In the end, the benefit doesn't justify the cost. The Edinburgh team came up with a clever way to test this prediction out. They ran the same colony experiment as before, but now they didn't take a random sample from the mixed beakers to start a new colony. Instead, they took a fixed number of bacteria from each beaker. This new procedure meant that there was no longer a benefit to being in a beaker where the bacteria were reproducing faster than the bacteria in other beakers. The only way to survive to the next round of the experiment was to outcompete the other bacteria in your own beaker--even if they were your own relatives. The researchers discovered that when closely related bacteria were forced to compete this way, utopia disappeared. Instead, the ratio of cheaters to do-gooders remained about where it started, around 50:50. The evolutionary logic of altruism also has a dark side, known as spite, which the Edinburgh have explored in a paper in press at the Journal of Evolutionary Biology. (They've posted a on their web site.) It's theoretically possible that you can help out your relatives (and even yourself) by doing harm to unrelated members of your same pdf Corante Industry News Corante Weblogs ABOUT THIS AUTHOR is the author of several popular science books and writes frequently for magazines including and . VISIT Carl Zimmer The New York Times Magazine, National Geographic, Science, Newsweek, Discover, Popular Science, Natural History More about Carl... CARLZIMMER.COM SUBSCRIBE Enter your email to be notified of new posts to THE LOOM Submit THE LOOM ARCHIVES Select Month... ABOUT THIS SITE The Loom weaves together deep time and modern life. It surveys new research on evolution, paleontology, and comparative biology and links them to biotechnology, medicine, neuroscience, computer science, environmental issues, politics, and ethics. Plus the occasional mind- controlling parasite. RECENT TRACKBACKS Gene Expression: Tell that to Mrs. Coolidge.... The Panda's Thumb: What mitochondria and Y chromosomes tell us about marriage... 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"Illuminating"-- "Thrilling"-- "Remarkable"-- "A page-turner"-- "A tour-de-force"-- NY Times LA Times Nature Wired Sunday Telegraph BUY A COPY READ THE INTRODUCTION RECENT COMMENTS Seth on Deadly, Tiny, and Ready For Its Close-up, Mr. DeMille Seth on Deadly, Tiny, and Ready For Its Close-up, Mr. DeMille Nightmare on Adam and His Eves Greyshade on Adam and His Eves joel on Adam and His Eves Brian on Adam and His Eves GOOD LINKS Dienekes' Anthropology Blog Alan Boyle: Cosmic Log Arts & Letters Daily Astrobiology Magazine Borneo Chela Borneo Chela Brain Waves Brightsurf Butterflies and Wheels Chris C Mooney Complexity Digest Conscious Entities Conservation News Corey Powell Crumb Trail David Grinspoon De Rerum Natura Defense Tech Discover Magazine Evolution Wiki Evolutionblog Future Now FuturePundit helmintholog Human Nature Daily Review Info Pollution Jay Manifold John Horgan Ken Miller's Evolution Page Living Code MainlyMartian Mark Lynas Martian Soil Massimo Pigliucci: Rationally Speaking National Center for Science Education Nature is Profligate Neuroeconomics Paleontology News Pharyngula Philip Ball Pipeline by Derek Lowe PLoS Biology Preposterous Universe PubMed Quark Soup Sarkar Lab WebLog SciTech Daily Review 27/8/04 9:48 am The Loom: Spite in a Petri Dish Page 1 of 2 http://www.corante.com/loom/archives/005849.html

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Adam and His Eves < Home > Deadly, Tiny, and Ready For Its Close-up, Mr. DeMille

August 25, 2004Spite in a Petri Dish

Spiteful bacteria. Two words you probably haven't heard together. Then again, you probably haven't heard of altruistic bacteria either, but both sorts of microbes are out there--and in many cases in you.

Bacteria lead marvelously complicated social lives. As a group of University of Edinburgh biologists today in , a nasty bug called

, which causes lung infections, dedicates a lot of energy to helping itsfellow . The microbes need iron, which is hard for them to find in a usable form in our bodies. To overcome the shortage, can release special molecules called siderophiles that snatch up iron compounds and make them palatable to the microbe. It takes a lot of energy for the bacteria to make siderophiles, and they aren't guaranteed a return for the investment. Once a siderophile harvests some iron, any that happens to be near it can gulp it down.

reported Nature Pseudomonas aeruginosa

P. aeruginosaP. aeruginosa

P. aeruginosa

At first glance, this generosity shouldn't exist. Microbes that put a lot of energy into helping other microbes should become extinct--or, more exactly, the genes that produce generosity in them should become extinct. Biologists have discoveredmutant that cheat--they don't produce siderophiles but still suck up siderophiles made by the do-gooders. It might seem as if the cheaters should wipe the do-gooders off the face of the Earth. The solution to this sort of puzzle--or at least one solution--is helping out family. Closely related microbes share the same genes. If a relative scoops up the iron and can reproduce, that's all the same for your genes.

P. aeruginoa

To test this hypothesis, the Edinburgh team ran an experiment. They filled twelve beakers with bacteria they produced from a single clone. While the bacteria were all closely related, half were cheaters and half were do-gooders. They let the bacteria feed, multiply, and compete with one another. Then they mixed the beakers together, and randomly chose some bacteria to start a new colony in twelve new beakers. More successful bacteria gradually became more common as they started new rounds. In the end, the researhers found--as they predicted--that these close relatives evolved into cooperators. The do-gooders wound up making up nearly 100% of the population.

That didn't happen when the researchers put together two different clones in the same beakers. When the bacteria had less chance of helping relatives, the do-gooders wound up making up less than half of the population.

But the biologists suspected that even families could turn on themselves. Mathematical models suggest that the benefit of helping relatives drops if relatives are crammed together too closely. They never get a free lunch--siderophiles produced by other, unrelated bacteria. Instead, all the benefits of consuming iron are offset by the cost of producing the siderophiles. In the end, the benefit doesn't justify the cost.

The Edinburgh team came up with a clever way to test this prediction out. They ran the same colony experiment as before, but now they didn't take a random sample from the mixed beakers to start a new colony. Instead, they took a fixed number of bacteria from each beaker. This new procedure meant that there was no longer a benefit to being in a beaker where the bacteria were reproducing faster than the bacteria in other beakers. The only way to survive to the next round of the experiment was to outcompete the other bacteria in your own beaker--even if they were your own relatives. The researchers discovered that when closely related bacteria were forced to compete this way, utopia disappeared. Instead, the ratio of cheaters to do-gooders remained about where it started, around 50:50.

The evolutionary logic of altruism also has a dark side, known as spite, which the Edinburgh have explored in a paper in press at the Journal of Evolutionary Biology. (They've posted a on their web site.) It's theoretically possible that you can help out your relatives (and even yourself) by doing harm to unrelated members of your same

pdf

Corante Industry News

Corante Weblogs

ABOUT THIS AUTHOR

is the author of several popular science books and writes frequently for magazines including

and .

VISIT

Carl Zimmer

The New York Times Magazine, National Geographic, Science, Newsweek, Discover, Popular Science, Natural History More about Carl...

CARLZIMMER.COM

SUBSCRIBEEnter your email to be notified of new posts to THE LOOM

Submit

THE LOOM ARCHIVESSelect Month...

ABOUT THIS SITEThe Loom weaves together deep time and modern life. It surveys new research on evolution, paleontology, and comparative biology and links them to biotechnology, medicine, neuroscience, computer science, environmental issues, politics, and ethics. Plus the occasional mind-controlling parasite.

RECENT TRACKBACKSGene Expression: Tell that to Mrs. Coolidge....The Panda's Thumb: What mitochondria and Y chromosomes tell us about marriage...Pharyngula: The Loom is back in businessGene Expression: Sex skewidiolect.org.uk: Links for 15th of JulyMuck and Mystery: Politics As Usual

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MORE ABOUT CARLCarl's books include and

. He has been been called "as fine a science essayist as we have" by the

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IdeaNew York Times Book

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SOUL MADE FLESHIn which I follow a motley crew of 17th-century alchemists, religious fugitives, and various scientific visionaries as they transformed the search for the soul into the science of the brain."Illuminating"--"Thrilling"--"Remarkable"--"A page-turner"--"A tour-de-force"--

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27/8/04 9:48 amThe Loom: Spite in a Petri Dish

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species, even if you have to pay a cost to do it. You might even die in the process, but if you could wreak enough havoc with your competitors, this sort of behavior could be favored by evolution. Biologists call this sort of behavior spite.

It turns out that many bacteria are spiteful in precisely this way. They produce antibiotics known as bacteriocins that are poisonous to their own species. These poisons take a lot of energy to make, and the bacteria often die as they release them. But these spiteful bacteria don't kill their own kin. Each strain of bacteria that makes a bacteriocin also makes an antidote to that particular kind of bacteriocin. Obviously, evolution won't favor a lineage of microbes that all blow themselves up. But it may encourage a certain balance of spite--a balance that will depend on the particular conditions in which the bacteria evolve.

Understanding the evolution of spiteful and altruistic bacteria will help scientists come up with new ways to fight diseases. (The altruism of can make life hell for people with cystic fibrosis, because the bacteria cooperate to rob a person of the iron in his or her lungs.) But bacteria can serve as a model for other organisms who can be altruistic or spiteful--like us. While some glib sociobiologists may see a link between a spiteful self-destructive microbe and a suicide bomber, the analogy as both disgusting and stupid. Yet the same evolutionary calculus keeps playing out in the behavior of bacteria and people alike.

P. aeruginosa

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• Deadly, Tiny, and Ready For Its Close-up, Mr. DeMille 08/26/2004• Spite in a Petri Dish 08/25/2004• Adam and His Eves 08/23/2004• Blog Revived 08/22/2004• Mooney on the Science War 07/08/2004• Evolution meets IVF 07/07/2004• Dawn of the Leafy Age 07/05/2004• The Little Ones 07/02/2004

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