Ignacio J. Melero-Jiménez's Avatar

Ignacio J. Melero-Jiménez

@ignamelero.bsky.social

Assistant Professor at @univmalaga.bsky.social | Exploring how photosynthetic microbes adapt to stress 🧪 | Combining experimental evolution, ecology & cutting-edge sequencing to predict adaptation 🔬

673 Followers  |  846 Following  |  7 Posts  |  Joined: 04.07.2024  |  1.3356

Latest posts by ignamelero.bsky.social on Bluesky

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Mutualism breakdown underpins evolutionary rescue in an obligate cross-feeding bacterial consortium - Nature Communications Rapid genetic adaptation to environmental change, or evolutionary rescue, can be constrained by a less adaptable mutualistic partner. Here, the authors explore evolutionary rescue in an obligate mutua...

www.nature.com/articles/s41...

13.04.2025 12:01 — 👍 2    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0

7/ This study has been one of the most rewarding moments of my postdoc. Working with @jfriedman.bsky.social (HUJI), Alejandro Couce (CBGP) , and the incredible people in their labs has made this experience both intellectually enriching and personally fulfilling 😁

14.04.2025 09:34 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0

6/ Obligate cooperation, beneficial under stable conditions, can become a liability during environmental disruption. This underscores the need for robust microbial consortia that account for potential breakdowns in cooperation, critical for both microbial ecology and synthetic biology.

14.04.2025 09:34 — 👍 2    🔁 1    💬 1    📌 0

5/Evolutionary rescue isn’t just about mutations, it’s shaped by ecological structure. In obligate mutualisms, interdependence can define the fitness landscape. Under stress, one partner’s ability to escape dependence can determine the survival of the community.

14.04.2025 09:34 — 👍 3    🔁 0    💬 1    📌 0

4/ Mutualistic consortia were markedly more sensitive to stress than prototrophic controls. As soon as one strain evolved independence, stress tolerance improved enough to ensure persistence.
In this context, cooperation constrained evolvability,

14.04.2025 09:34 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 1    📌 0

3/ We consider several factors: how easily metabolic autonomy is regained, and the role of demographic factors shaping population dynamics. These likely determine which strain survives—but why does gaining autonomy offer such an advantage?

14.04.2025 09:34 — 👍 1    🔁 0    💬 1    📌 0

2/ Over 80% of mutualistic consortia underwent evolutionary rescue. Yet intriguingly, the same strain consistently survived by regaining metabolic autonomy, while its partner went extinct.

What factors determined which strain gained this adaptive advantage?

14.04.2025 09:34 — 👍 2    🔁 0    💬 1    📌 0
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Mutualism breakdown underpins evolutionary rescue in an obligate cross-feeding bacterial consortium - Nature Communications Rapid genetic adaptation to environmental change, or evolutionary rescue, can be constrained by a less adaptable mutualistic partner. Here, the authors explore evolutionary rescue in an obligate mutua...

1/ In our new paper, we explored whether obligate mutualisms can survive abrupt stress via evolutionary rescue.

We found that evolutionary rescue is possible—but it comes at the cost of mutualism. @jfriedman.bsky.social

#microsky #evosky #mevosky

14.04.2025 09:34 — 👍 45    🔁 21    💬 1    📌 0

I just posted "Some Experiments Work, and Some Don't."

It features this new paper from Paul Rainey's group, along with a *failed* experiment that Paul Sniegowski and I ran in the 1990s trying to test the same idea.

telliamedrevisited.wordpress.com/2025/02/21/s...

21.02.2025 21:56 — 👍 74    🔁 26    💬 2    📌 4
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Reversion to metabolic autonomy underpins evolutionary rescue of a bacterial obligate mutualism bioRxiv - the preprint server for biology, operated by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, a research and educational institution

Happy to share our latest manuscript we we study evolutionary rescue in a bacterial mutualism:
Reversion to metabolic autonomy underpins evolutionary rescue of a bacterial obligate mutualism
shorturl.at/tFNTw

03.07.2024 14:05 — 👍 18    🔁 15    💬 1    📌 0

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