Publication | Closed Access
Phenotypically heterogeneous populations in spatially heterogeneous environments
15
Citations
24
References
2014
Year
BiologyHomogeneous PopulationMolecular EcologyHeterogeneous PopulationsNatural SciencesPopulation EcologyEvolutionary BiologyPopulation DynamicSpatial ExpansionMicrobial EcologyPopulation Balance ModelingMicrobiologyInfection ControlPhenotypic HeterogeneityMedicineEvolutionary DynamicAntimicrobial ResistanceSpatial Ecology
The spatial expansion of a population in a nonuniform environment may benefit from phenotypic heterogeneity with interconverting subpopulations using different survival strategies. We analyze the crossing of an antibiotic-containing environment by a bacterial population consisting of rapidly growing normal cells and slow-growing, but antibiotic-tolerant persister cells. The dynamics of crossing is characterized by mean first arrival times and is found to be surprisingly complex. It displays three distinct regimes with different scaling behavior that can be understood based on an analytical approximation. Our results suggest that a phenotypically heterogeneous population has a fitness advantage in nonuniform environments and can spread more rapidly than a homogeneous population.
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