AI Article Synopsis

  • Cellular adaptation to environments like starvation is crucial for microbial survival, but uniform responses can lead to widespread cell death and reduced fitness within the community.
  • Yeast cells facing glucose depletion release toxic substances that can harm even the cells that produce them, promoting a mass suicide effect among the population.
  • Some yeast cells manage to adapt to these autotoxins without genetic changes, allowing them to survive while harming later-arrival cells, highlighting a potential universal communication system that could influence the evolution from unicellular to multicellular life forms.

Article Abstract

Cellular adaptation to stressful environments such as starvation is essential to the survival of microbial communities, but the uniform response of the cell community may lead to entire cell death or severe damage to their fitness. Here, we demonstrate an elaborate response of the yeast community against glucose depletion, in which the first adapted cells kill the latecomer cells. During glucose depletion, yeast cells release autotoxins, such as leucic acid and L-2keto-3methylvalerate, which can even kill the clonal cells of the ones producing them. Although these autotoxins were likely to induce mass suicide, some cells differentiated to adapt to the autotoxins without genetic changes. If nondifferentiated latecomers tried to invade the habitat, autotoxins damaged or killed the latecomers, but the differentiated cells could selectively survive. Phylogenetically distant fission and budding yeast shared this behavior using the same autotoxins, suggesting that latecomer killing may be the universal system of intercellular communication, which may be relevant to the evolutional transition from unicellular to multicellular organisms.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9639812PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3001844DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Cellular adaptation to environments like starvation is crucial for microbial survival, but uniform responses can lead to widespread cell death and reduced fitness within the community.
  • Yeast cells facing glucose depletion release toxic substances that can harm even the cells that produce them, promoting a mass suicide effect among the population.
  • Some yeast cells manage to adapt to these autotoxins without genetic changes, allowing them to survive while harming later-arrival cells, highlighting a potential universal communication system that could influence the evolution from unicellular to multicellular life forms.
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Psychoanalytic views of aggression: some theoretical problems.

Br J Med Psychol

June 1992

Psychotherapy Unit, Maudsley Hospital, Denmark Hill, London, UK.

Various problems in relation to psychoanalytic theories of aggression are considered in a review which is by no means exhaustive but includes areas which have puzzled and interested the author. First to be considered is why the concept of aggression as a major drive was a relative late-comer in psychoanalysis; next the contentious concept of a 'death instinct' and some of the factors in Freud's lifetime which may have contributed to both. Then it is suggested that we seem to have theories of aggression which might be called primary or secondary in two different senses.

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