The size of the immune repertoire of bacteria

ORAL

Abstract

Some bacteria and archaea possess an immune system, based on the CRISPR-Cas mechanism, that confers adaptive immunity against phage. In such species, individual bacteria maintain a "cassette" of viral DNA elements called spacers as a memory of past infections. The typical cassette contains a few dozen spacers. Given that bacteria can have very large genomes, and since having more spacers should confer a better memory, it is puzzling that so little genetic space would be devoted by bacteria to their adaptive immune system. Here, we identify a fundamental trade-off between the size of the bacterial immune repertoire and effectiveness of response to a given threat, and show how this tradeoff imposes a limit on the optimal size of the CRISPR cassette.

*NSF PHY-1734030
Mathematical Modeling for Living Systems (#400425)
DFG grant (SFB1310)

Presenters

  • Serena Bradde

    • Physics Department, University of Pennsylvenia

Authors

  • Serena Bradde

    • Physics Department, University of Pennsylvenia
  • Armita Nourmohammad

    • Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization
    • Physics Department, University of Washington
    • University of Washington
  • Sidhartha Goyal

    • Physics Department, University of Toronto
    • University of Toronto
    • Univ of Toronto
  • Vijay Balasubramanian

    • University of Pennsylvania
    • Physics Department, University of Pennsylvenia