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Sucrose Utilization in Budding Yeast as a Model for the Origin of Undifferentiated Multicellularity

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TLDR
It is proposed that the prior use of public goods led to selection for the incomplete cell separation that first produced multicellularity.
Abstract
We use the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, to investigate one model for the initial emergence of multicellularity: the formation of multicellular aggregates as a result of incomplete cell separation. We combine simulations with experiments to show how the use of secreted public goods favors the formation of multicellular aggregates. Yeast cells can cooperate by secreting invertase, an enzyme that digests sucrose into monosaccharides, and many wild isolates are multicellular because cell walls remain attached to each other after the cells divide. We manipulate invertase secretion and cell attachment, and show that multicellular clumps have two advantages over single cells: they grow under conditions where single cells cannot and they compete better against cheaters, cells that do not make invertase. We propose that the prior use of public goods led to selection for the incomplete cell separation that first produced multicellularity.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial structure, cooperation and competition in biofilms

TL;DR: How the spatial arrangement of genotypes within a community influences the cooperative and competitive cell–cell interactions that define biofilm form and function is discussed.
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Experimental evolution of multicellularity

TL;DR: Experimental evolution shows that key aspects of multicellular complexity, a subject of central importance to biology, can readily evolve from unicellular eukaryotes.
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The evolution of cooperation within the gut microbiota

TL;DR: It is found that extracellular digestion of inulin increases the fitness of B. ovatus owing to reciprocal benefits when it feeds other gut species such as Bacteroides vulgatus, a rare example of naturally-evolved cooperation between microbial species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial solutions to multicellularity: a tale of biofilms, filaments and fruiting bodies.

TL;DR: The strategies that are used by bacteria to form and grow inMulticellular structures that have hallmark features of multicellularity, including morphological differentiation, programmed cell death and patterning are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solutions to the public goods dilemma in bacterial biofilms

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the public goods dilemma may be solved by two very different mechanisms: cells can produce thick biofilms that confine the goods to producers, or fluid flow can remove soluble products of chitin digestion, denying access to nonproducers.
References
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Book

CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics

TL;DR: CRC handbook of chemistry and physics, CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, CRC handbook as discussed by the authors, CRC Handbook for Chemistry and Physiology, CRC Handbook for Physics,
Book

The mathematics of diffusion

John Crank
TL;DR: Though it incorporates much new material, this new edition preserves the general character of the book in providing a collection of solutions of the equations of diffusion and describing how these solutions may be obtained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Additional modules for versatile and economical PCR-based gene deletion and modification in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

TL;DR: A new set of plasmids that serve as templates for the PCR synthesis of fragments that allow a variety of gene modifications that should further facilitate the rapid analysis of gene function in S. cerevisiae.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improved monomeric red, orange and yellow fluorescent proteins derived from Discosoma sp. red fluorescent protein.

TL;DR: The latest red version matures more completely, is more tolerant of N-terminal fusions and is over tenfold more photostable than mRFP1, and three monomers with distinguishable hues from yellow-orange to red-orange have higher quantum efficiencies.
Book ChapterDOI

Getting started with yeast.

TL;DR: The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is now recognized as a model system representing a simple eukaryote whose genome can be easily manipulated and made particularly accessible to gene cloning and genetic engineering techniques.
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