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

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Abstract

Temperate bacteriophages lyse or lysogenize host cells depending on various parameters of infection, a key one being the ratio of the number of free viruses to the number of host cells. However, the effect of different propensities of phages for lysis and lysogeny on phage fitness remains an open problem. We explore a nonlinear dynamic evolution model of competition between two phages, one of which is disadvantaged in both the lytic and lysogenic phases. We show that the disadvantaged phage can win the competition by alternating between the lytic and lysogenic phases, each of which individually is a “loser.” This counterintuitive result is analogous to Parrondo’s paradox in game theory, whereby individually losing strategies combine to produce a winning outcome. The results suggest that evolution of phages optimizes the ratio between the lysis and lysogeny propensities rather than the phage burst size in any individual phase. These findings are likely to broadly apply to the evolution of host–parasite interactions.

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Cheong, K. H., Wen, T., Benler, S., Koh, J. M., & Koonin, E. V. (2022). Alternating lysis and lysogeny is a winning strategy in bacteriophages due to Parrondo’s paradox. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(13). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2115145119

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