Bacteria Between Protists and Phages: from Antipredation Strategies to the Evolution of Pathogenicity.
From: Chemin de la Chaumény 13, CH-1814 La Tour de Peilz, Switzerland. haraldbruessow@yahoo.com
Molecular microbiology
- Publish Date: Aug 2007
- ISSN: 0950-382X
- Volume: 65
- Issue: 3
- Pages: 583-9
- Medium: Print
- Language: English
- Citation (JAMA): Brüssow Harald, et al. Bacteria Between Protists and Phages: from Antipredation Strategies to the Evolution of Pathogenicity.. Mol. Microbiol. Aug 2007;65:583-9
Abstract
Bacteriophages and protists are major causes of bacterial mortality. Genomics suggests that phages evolved well before eukaryotic protists. Bacteria were thus initially only confronted with phage predators. When protists evolved, bacteria were caught between two types of predators. One successful antigrazing strategy of bacteria was the elaboration of toxins that would kill the grazer. The released cell content would feed bystander bacteria. I suggest here that, to fight grazing protists, bacteria teamed up with those phage predators that concluded at least a temporary truce with them in the form of lysogeny. Lysogeny was perhaps initially a resource management strategy of phages that could not maintain infection chains. Subsequently, lysogeny might have evolved into a bacterium-prophage coalition attacking protists, which became a food source for them. When protists evolved into multicellular animals, the lysogenic bacteria tracked their evolving food source. This hypothesis could explain why a frequent scheme of bacterial pathogenicity is the survival in phagocytes, why a significant fraction of bacterial pathogens have prophage-encoded virulence genes, and why some virulence factors of animal pathogens are active against unicellular eukaryotes. Bacterial pathogenicity might thus be one playing option of the stone-scissor-paper game played between phages-bacteria-protists, with humans getting into the crossfire.
Mesh Headings (Keywords): Bacteria, Bacteriophages, Evolution
Check for Full Text / PubMed Unique Identifier (PMID): 17608793
This abstract is part of PubMed, a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. PubMed includes more than 17 million citations from MEDLINE and other life science journals for biomedical articles. See Copyright and Disclaimers.
Linked medical terms appearing on this page are added by Healia to help readers find more information and are not part of the original PubMed document.
The data herein was last updated on July 8th, 2008 and may not reflect the most current and accurate data available from NLM.
