Abstract
Horizontal gene transfer consists in exchanging genetic materials between microorganisms during their lives. This is a major mechanism of bacterial evolution and is believed to be of main importance in antibiotics resistance. We consider a stochastic model for the evolution of a discrete population structured by a trait taking finitely many values, with density-dependent competition. Traits are vertically inherited unless a mutation occurs, and can also be horizontally transferred by unilateral conjugation with frequency dependent rate. Our goal is to analyze the trade-off between natural evolution to higher birth rates on one side, and transfer which drives the population towards lower birth rates on the other side. Simulations show that evolutionary outcomes include evolutionary suicide or cyclic re-emergence of small populations with well-adapted traits. We focus on a parameter scaling where individual mutations are rare but the global mutation rate tends to infinity. This implies that negligible subpopulations may have a strong contribution to evolution. Our main result quantifies the asymptotic dynamics of subpopulation sizes on a logarithmic scale. We characterize the possible evolutionary outcomes with explicit criteria on the model parameters. An important ingredient for the proofs lies in comparisons of the stochastic population process with linear or logistic birth–death processes with immigration. For the latter processes, we derive several results of independent interest.
Funding Statement
This work has been supported by the Chair “Modélisation Mathématique et Biodiversité” of Veolia Environnement-Ecole Polytechnique-Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle-Fondation X. V.C.T. also acknowledges support from ANR CADENCE (ANR-16-CE32-0007) and Labex Bézout (ANR-10-LABX-58).
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Tobias Paul, Jochen Blath, the anonymous reviewers and Associate Editor for their careful reading and remarks.
Citation
Nicolas Champagnat. Sylvie Méléard. Viet Chi Tran. "Stochastic analysis of emergence of evolutionary cyclic behavior in population dynamics with transfer." Ann. Appl. Probab. 31 (4) 1820 - 1867, August 2021. https://doi.org/10.1214/20-AAP1635
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