Abstract
Spontaneous variation in appearance was studied in bacterial colonies of Serratia marcescens F morphotype1: (i) A defined array of non-heritable phenotype variations does appear repeatedly; (ii) The presence of colonies of different bacterial species will narrow the variability toward the typical F appearance, as if such an added environmental factor curtailed the capacity of colony morphospace; (iii) Similarly the morphospace becomes reduced by random mutations leading to new, heritable morphotypes—at the same time opening a new array of variations typical for the mutant but not accessible directly from the original F morphospace. Results are discussed in context with biphasic model of early morphogenesis applicable to all multicellular bodies.
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Čepl, J., Blahůšková, A., Neubauer, Z., & Markoš, A. (2016). Variations and heredity in bacterial colonies. Communicative and Integrative Biology, 9(6). https://doi.org/10.1080/19420889.2016.1261228
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