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> competition between fungi and bacteria |
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Sept. 27, 2006 — There was a discussion
in our class about fungi producing antibiotics in our
bodies. We reasoned that fungi and bacteria compete
for available nutrients so random mutations and survival
of the fittest comes into play. Do scientists perceive
this phenomenon in this way? Is it possible that fungi
know everything about the metabolic pathways of bacteria
and specifically produce antibiotics that target those
pathways?
—Submitted by Shrikant
Mantri, Indian Institute of
Information Technology Allahabad
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Response
by Robert Wheeler
Postdoctoral researcher in Whitehead Member
Gerald Fink's lab |
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It is certainly possible that our body is able to sense
bactericidal antibiotics produced by fungi. It is also
likely that fungi are able to perceive the presence
of bacteria, by sensing bacteria-specific metabolites.
However, it is unlikely that fungi “know”
anything specific about the bacterial metabolic pathways.
Over evolutionary time, they have developed weapons
that work, but only through trial-and-error rather than
through design.
Specifically, fungi undergo random mutations over time
and the mutations that confer a selective growth advantage
(for instance by production of antibiotics that kill
bacteria) will allow the fungi with those mutations
to reproduce more efficiently. In this way, beneficial
mutations will accumulate and those fungi that create
effective antibiotics will survive while those that
do not will die. In this way, natural selection acts
on random mutations to drive evolutionary change without
any forethought or planning on the part of the organisms.
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Last updated September 27, 2006
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