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The Evolution of Multicellularity

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If you have a question about this talk, please contact Prof George Salmond.

Cooperation is central to the emergence of multicellular life, however the means by which the earliest collectives maintained integrity in the face of destructive cheating types is unclear. One idea posits cheats as a primitive germ line in a life cycle that facilitates collective reproduction. I will describe an experiment in which simple cooperating lineages of bacteria were propagated under a selective regime that rewarded collective-level persistence. Collectives reproduced via life cycles that either embraced, or purged, cheating types. When embraced, the life cycle alternated between phenotypic states. Selection fostered inception of a developmental switch that underpinned the emergence of collectives whose fitness, during the course of evolution, became decoupled from the fitness of constituent cells. Such development and decoupling did not occur when groups reproduced via a cheat-purging regime. I will discuss the findings in the context of key events in the evolution of Darwinian individuality during the transition from single cells to multicellular modes of existence.

This talk is part of the Seminars at the Department of Biochemistry series.

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