Eco-evolutionary dynamics of nested Darwinian populations and the emergence of community-level heredity

Interactions among microbial cells can generate new chemistries and functions, but exploitation requires establishment of communities that reliably recapitulate community-level phenotypes. Using mechanistic mathematical models, we show how simple manipulations to population structure can exogenously impose Darwinian-like properties on communities. Such scaffolding causes communities to participate directly in the process of evolution by natural selection and drives the evolution of cell-level interactions to the point where, despite underlying stochasticity, derived communities give rise to offspring communities that faithfully re-establish parental phenotype. The mechanism is akin to a developmental process (developmental correction) that arises from density-dependent interactions among cells. Knowledge of ecological factors affecting evolution of developmental correction has implications for understanding the evolutionary origin of major egalitarian transitions, symbioses, and for top-down engineering of microbial communities.


Sample-size estimation
 You should state whether an appropriate sample size was computed when the study was being designed  You should state the statistical method of sample size computation and any required assumptions  If no explicit power analysis was used, you should describe how you decided what sample (replicate) size (number) to use Please outline where this information can be found within the submission (e.g., sections or figure legends), or explain why this information doesn't apply to your submission:

Replicates
 You should report how often each experiment was performed  You should include a definition of biological versus technical replication  The data obtained should be provided and sufficient information should be provided to indicate the number of independent biological and/or technical replicates  If you encountered any outliers, you should describe how these were handled  Criteria for exclusion/inclusion of data should be clearly stated  High-throughput sequence data should be uploaded before submission, with a private link for reviewers provided (these are available from both GEO and ArrayExpress) Please outline where this information can be found within the submission (e.g., sections or figure legends), or explain why this information doesn't apply to your submission: Not applicable. This submission presents analytical analyses and simulations of models.
Not applicable. This submission presents analytical analyses and simulations of models.
1 Statistical reporting  Statistical analysis methods should be described and justified  Raw data should be presented in figures whenever informative to do so (typically when N per group is less than 10)  For each experiment, you should identify the statistical tests used, exact values of N, definitions of center, methods of multiple test correction, and dispersion and precision measures (e.g., mean, median, SD, SEM, confidence intervals; and, for the major substantive results, a measure of effect size (e.g., Pearson's r, Cohen's d)  Report exact p-values wherever possible alongside the summary statistics and 95% confidence intervals. These should be reported for all key questions and not only when the p-value is less than 0.05.
Please outline where this information can be found within the submission (e.g., sections or figure legends), or explain why this information doesn't apply to your submission: (For large datasets, or papers with a very large number of statistical tests, you may upload a single table file with tests, Ns, etc., with reference to sections in the manuscript.)

Group allocation
 Indicate how samples were allocated into experimental groups (in the case of clinical studies, please specify allocation to treatment method); if randomization was used, please also state if restricted randomization was applied  Indicate if masking was used during group allocation, data collection and/or data analysis Please outline where this information can be found within the submission (e.g., sections or figure legends), or explain why this information doesn't apply to your submission: Additional data files ("source data")  We encourage you to upload relevant additional data files, such as numerical data that are represented as a graph in a figure, or as a summary table  Where provided, these should be in the most useful format, and they can be uploaded as "Source data" files linked to a main figure or table  Include model definition files including the full list of parameters used  Include code used for data analysis (e.g., R, MatLab)  Avoid stating that data files are "available upon request" Please indicate the figures or tables for which source data files have been provided: eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd is a limited liability non-profit non-stock corporation incorporated in the State of Delaware, USA, with company number 5030732, and is registered in the UK with company number FC030576 and branch number BR015634 at the address 1st Floor, 24 Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 1JP | August 2014 Not applicable. This submission presents analytical analyses and simulations of models.
Not applicable. This submission presents analytical analyses and simulations of models.
The source code for all simulations and figures in the manuscript is available as a zip file uploaded with the manuscript and in a public git repository (https://gitlab.com/ecoevomath/estaudel).