Synthetic cooperation in engineered yeast populations Journal Article


Authors: Shou, W.; Ram, S.; Vilar, J. M. G.
Article Title: Synthetic cooperation in engineered yeast populations
Abstract: Cooperative interactions are key to diverse biological phenomena ranging from multicellularity to mutualism. Such diversity makes the ability to create and control cooperation desirable for potential applications in areas as varied as agriculture, pollutant treatment, and medicine. Here we show that persistent cooperation can be engineered by introducing a small set of genetic modifications into previously noninteracting cell populations. Specifically, we report the construction of a synthetic obligatory cooperative system, termed CoSMO (cooperation that is synthetic and mutually obligatory), which consists of a pair of nonmating yeast strains, each supplying an essential metabolite to the other strain. The behavior of the two strains in isolation, however, revealed unintended constraints that restrict cooperation, such as asymmetry in starvation tolerance and delays in nutrient release until near cell death. However, the joint system is shown mathematically and experimentally to be viable over a wide range of initial conditions, with oscillating population ratio settling to a value predicted by nutrient supply and consumption. Unexpectedly, even in the absence of explicitly engineered mechanisms to stabilize cooperation, the cooperative system can consistently develop increased ability to survive reductions in population density. Extending synthetic biology from the design of genetic circuits to the engineering of ecological interactions, CoSMO provides a quantitative system for linking processes at the cellular level to the collective behavior at the system level, as well as a genetically tractable system for studying the evolution of cooperation. © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.
Keywords: gene mutation; nonhuman; flow cytometry; genotype; evolution; mathematical modeling; mathematical model; saccharomyces cerevisiae; quantitative analysis; bioassay; models, genetic; cell density; yeast; nutrient; population dynamics; metabolite; lysine; organisms, genetically modified; cooperation; growth rate; adenine; ecology; mutualism; symbiosis; obligate cooperation; quantitative biology; synthetic ecology
Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume: 104
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0027-8424
Publisher: National Academy of Sciences  
Date Published: 2007-02-06
Start Page: 1877
End Page: 1882
Language: English
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0610575104
PUBMED: 17267602
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC1794266
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 33" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "CODEN: PNASA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Wenying Shou
    1 Shou
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