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Alternating lysis and lysogeny is a winning strategy in bacteriophages due to Parrondo's paradox.


ABSTRACT: SignificanceBacteriophages, the most widespread reproducing biological entity on Earth, employ two strategies of virus-host interaction: lysis of the host cell and lysogeny whereby the virus genome integrates into the host genome and propagates vertically with it. We present a population model that reveals an effect known as Parrondo's paradox in game theory: Alternating between lysis and lysogeny is a winning strategy for a bacteriophage, even when each strategy individually is at a disadvantage compared with a competing bacteriophage. Thus, evolution of bacteriophages appears to optimize the ratio between the lysis and lysogeny propensities rather than the phage burst size in any individual phase. This phenomenon is likely to be relevant for understanding evolution of other host-parasites systems.

SUBMITTER: Cheong KH 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9060511 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Alternating lysis and lysogeny is a winning strategy in bacteriophages due to Parrondo's paradox.

Cheong Kang Hao KH   Wen Tao T   Benler Sean S   Koh Jin Ming JM   Koonin Eugene V EV  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20220322 13


SignificanceBacteriophages, the most widespread reproducing biological entity on Earth, employ two strategies of virus-host interaction: lysis of the host cell and lysogeny whereby the virus genome integrates into the host genome and propagates vertically with it. We present a population model that reveals an effect known as Parrondo's paradox in game theory: Alternating between lysis and lysogeny is a winning strategy for a bacteriophage, even when each strategy individually is at a disadvantag  ...[more]

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