Competing metabolic strategies in a multilevel selection model
Andr\'e Amado, Lenin Fern\'andez, Weini Huang, Fernando F. Ferreira,, Paulo R. A. Campos

TL;DR
This study models two metabolic strategies to understand how energy efficiency evolves under multilevel selection, revealing structured populations favor efficiency more than well-mixed ones, with group dynamics playing a crucial role.
Contribution
It introduces a model comparing efficient and inefficient metabolic strategies, highlighting the impact of population structure and group dynamics on energy optimization evolution.
Findings
Structured populations expand the parameter space for efficient strain invasion.
Efficient strains are more stable in structured populations than in well-mixed populations.
Small group sizes can promote invasion of efficient strains despite increased local competition.
Abstract
The interplay between energy efficiency and evolutionary mechanisms is addressed. One important question is how evolutionary mechanisms can select for the optimised usage of energy in situations where it does not lead to immediate advantage. For example, this problem is of great importance to improve our understanding about the major transition from unicellular to multicellular form of life. The immediate advantage of gathering efficient individuals in an energetic context is not clear. Although this process increases relatedness among individuals, it also increases local competition. To address this question, we propose a model of two competing metabolic strategies that makes explicit reference to the resource usage. We assume the existence of an efficient strain, which converts resource into energy at high efficiency but displays a low rate of resource consumption, and an inefficient…
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