2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.09.02.506373
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Environmental feedback drives oxidative stress response heterogeneity in bacterial populations

Abstract: Induction of phenotypic heterogeneity is a ubiquitous consequence of bacterial stress responses. It is commonly postulated that isogenic cells exploit stochastic molecular fluctuations to generate phenotypic heterogeneity as a population survival strategy (termed bet-hedging). However, it is also possible that each cell attempts to maximise its own chances of survival. In that case, the apparent heterogeneity could either be caused by inevitable molecular noise or by underlying deterministic mechanisms which h… Show more

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“…Local stresses can readily arise within SOMS, thereby influencing mutational rates and processes within those local patches. For example, ROS gradients could be generated in phototrophic SOMS due to photosynthesis at high surface light or from rising oxygen levels and due to variable ROS scavenging capabilities within the structure [ 98 , 99 ].…”
Section: From Short-term Dynamics To Evolution—the Eco–evo Feedbackmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Local stresses can readily arise within SOMS, thereby influencing mutational rates and processes within those local patches. For example, ROS gradients could be generated in phototrophic SOMS due to photosynthesis at high surface light or from rising oxygen levels and due to variable ROS scavenging capabilities within the structure [ 98 , 99 ].…”
Section: From Short-term Dynamics To Evolution—the Eco–evo Feedbackmentioning
confidence: 99%