More Bang For Your Buck: Quorum-Sensing Capabilities Improve the Efficacy of Suicidal Altruism
Anya Elaine Johnson, Eli Strauss, Rodney Pickett, Christoph Adami, Ian, Dworkin, and Heather J. Goldsby

TL;DR
This study uses digital evolution to show that quorum sensing enhances the effectiveness of suicidal altruism in bacteria, leading to more successful competition outcomes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that quorum sensing communication improves the efficacy of suicidal altruism, a novel insight into microbial cooperation strategies.
Findings
Quorum sensing altruists kill more competitors per explosion.
Quorum sensing increases the success rate of altruistic strategies.
Communication enables better timing of altruistic acts.
Abstract
Within the context of evolution, an altruistic act that benefits the receiving individual at the expense of the acting individual is a puzzling phenomenon. An extreme form of altruism can be found in colicinogenic E. coli. These suicidal altruists explode, releasing colicins that kill unrelated individuals, which are not colicin resistant. By committing suicide, the altruist makes it more likely that its kin will have less competition. The benefits of this strategy rely on the number of competitors and kin nearby. If the organism explodes at an inopportune time, the suicidal act may not harm any competitors. Communication could enable organisms to act altruistically when environmental conditions suggest that that strategy would be most beneficial. Quorum sensing is a form of communication in which bacteria produce a protein and gauge the amount of that protein around them. Quorum…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Artificial Immune Systems Applications · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics
