TL;DR
This paper explores how enzyme regulation and mutations influence microbial diversity in a serial dilution ecosystem, revealing that regulation can reduce diversity while mutations may promote it, highlighting contrasting effects of adaptation and evolution.
Contribution
The study introduces a model incorporating enzyme regulation and mutations, demonstrating their distinct impacts on microbial diversity in fluctuating environments.
Findings
Enzyme regulation can lead to collapse of diversity over time.
Mutations can increase diversity through a 'rich-get-poorer' effect.
Different microbial responses have contrasting impacts on community diversity.
Abstract
Microbial communities are ubiquitous in nature and come in a multitude of forms, ranging from communities dominated by a handful of species to communities containing a wide variety of metabolically distinct organisms. This huge range in diversity is not a curiosity - microbial diversity has been linked to outcomes of substantial ecological and medical importance. However, the mechanisms underlying microbial diversity are still under debate, as simple mathematical models only permit as many species to coexist as there are resources. A plethora of mechanisms have been proposed to explain the origins of microbial diversity, but many of these analyses omit a key property of real microbial ecosystems: the propensity of the microbes themselves to change their growth properties within and across generations. In order to explore the impact of this key property on microbial diversity, we expand…
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