Bacteria Use Collective Behavior to Generate Diverse Combat Strategies, 2018, Foster et al

Andy

Retired committee member
While watching Karl Morten's presentation at the 2020 CMRC conference he says, at this point
so this is, I came across this guy, so the guy called Kevin Foster in Oxford, he was just down the road I didn't know much about him, he's quite famous, he's got this amazing paper that's definitely worth a read, and if the Science for ME guys are watching this can you look at
this and tell me what it means because it's quite complicated?
This is the paper he refers to.

Animals have evolved a wide diversity of aggressive behavior often based upon the careful monitoring of other individuals. Bacteria are also capable of aggression, with many species using toxins to kill or inhibit their competitors. Like animals, bacteria also have systems to monitor others during antagonistic encounters, but how this translates into behavior remains poorly understood.

Here, we use colonies of Escherichia coli carrying colicin-encoding plasmids as a model for studying antagonistic behavior. We show that in the absence of threat, dispersed cells with low reproductive value produce colicin toxins spontaneously, generating efficient pre-emptive attacks. Cells can also respond conditionally to toxins released by clonemates via autoinduction or other genotypes via competition sensing. The strength of both pre-emptive and responsive attacks varies widely between strains. We demonstrate that this variability occurs easily through mutation by rationally engineering strains to recapitulate the diversity in naturally occurring strategies.

Finally, we discover that strains that can detect both competitors and clonemates are capable of massive coordinated attacks on competing colonies. This collective behavior protects established colonies from competitors, mirroring the evolution of alarm calling in the animal world.
https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(17)31663-9

If I understand right Karl wonders if perhaps the toxins released by bacteria might play a role in ME (and other conditions).
 
Moreover, animals are known to be a host within a symbiosis of several bacteria and maybe even fungi (?), and here as well a common behaviour may be present and could be out of a healthy balance.


For the fungus candida albicans a toxin has been identified (candidalysin) which provokes an immune response, but normally the fungus is reluctant to build it (and staying in a non-hyphal form). This is as far as I remember. I find this quite interesting. The failure even might be partly on the side of the host, allowing the symbiotic organisms to behave like so.
 
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