Subpopulations and stability in microbial communities

In microbial communities, each species often has multiple, distinct phenotypes, but studies of ecological stability have largely ignored this subpopulation structure. Here, we show that such implicit averaging over phenotypes leads to incorrect linear stability results. We then analyze the effect of...

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Bibliografische gegevens
Hoofdauteurs: Haas, PA, Oliveira, NM, Goldstein, RE
Formaat: Journal article
Taal:English
Gepubliceerd in: American Physical Society 2020
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author Haas, PA
Oliveira, NM
Goldstein, RE
author_facet Haas, PA
Oliveira, NM
Goldstein, RE
author_sort Haas, PA
collection OXFORD
description In microbial communities, each species often has multiple, distinct phenotypes, but studies of ecological stability have largely ignored this subpopulation structure. Here, we show that such implicit averaging over phenotypes leads to incorrect linear stability results. We then analyze the effect of phenotypic switching in detail in an asymptotic limit and partly overturn classical stability paradigms: Abundant phenotypic variation is linearly destabilizing but, surprisingly, a rare phenotype such as bacterial persisters has a stabilizing effect. Finally, we extend these results by showing how phenotypic variation modifies the stability of the system to large perturbations such as antibiotic treatments.
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spelling oxford-uuid:2ebc09ce-13b3-49d7-8a14-25953829f4452022-03-26T12:50:49ZSubpopulations and stability in microbial communitiesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2ebc09ce-13b3-49d7-8a14-25953829f445EnglishSymplectic ElementsAmerican Physical Society2020Haas, PAOliveira, NMGoldstein, REIn microbial communities, each species often has multiple, distinct phenotypes, but studies of ecological stability have largely ignored this subpopulation structure. Here, we show that such implicit averaging over phenotypes leads to incorrect linear stability results. We then analyze the effect of phenotypic switching in detail in an asymptotic limit and partly overturn classical stability paradigms: Abundant phenotypic variation is linearly destabilizing but, surprisingly, a rare phenotype such as bacterial persisters has a stabilizing effect. Finally, we extend these results by showing how phenotypic variation modifies the stability of the system to large perturbations such as antibiotic treatments.
spellingShingle Haas, PA
Oliveira, NM
Goldstein, RE
Subpopulations and stability in microbial communities
title Subpopulations and stability in microbial communities
title_full Subpopulations and stability in microbial communities
title_fullStr Subpopulations and stability in microbial communities
title_full_unstemmed Subpopulations and stability in microbial communities
title_short Subpopulations and stability in microbial communities
title_sort subpopulations and stability in microbial communities
work_keys_str_mv AT haaspa subpopulationsandstabilityinmicrobialcommunities
AT oliveiranm subpopulationsandstabilityinmicrobialcommunities
AT goldsteinre subpopulationsandstabilityinmicrobialcommunities