In most environments, bacteria reside primarily in biofilms, which are social consortia of cells that are embedded in an extracellular matrix and undergo developmental programmes resulting in a predictable biofilm 'life cycle'. Recent research on many different bacterial species has now shown that the final stage in this life cycle includes the production and release of differentiated dispersal cells. The formation of these cells and their eventual dispersal is initiated through diverse and remarkably sophisticated mechanisms, suggesting that there are strong evolutionary pressures for dispersal from an otherwise largely sessile biofilm. The evolutionary aspect of biofilm dispersal is now being explored through the integration of molecular ...
Bacteria are the smallest and most abundant form of life. They have traditionally been considered as...
Bacteria in the environment live predominantly as surface-attached communities, called biofilms, and...
Living organisms constantly interact with their habitats, selectively taking up compounds from their...
One common feature of biofilm development is the active dispersal of cells from the mature biofilm, ...
Biofilms — matrix-enclosed microbial accretions that adhere to biological or non-biological surfaces...
Understanding dispersal is a central aim of evolutionary ecology. Theoretical analyses of dispersal ...
Understanding dispersal is a central aim of evolutionary ecology. Theoretical analyses of dispersal ...
Unicellular bacterium in nature prefers to gather round to form a surface attached multi-cellular co...
Growing bacterial populations diversify to produce a number of competing lineages. In the Pseudomona...
In nature, bacteria alternate between two modes of growth: a unicellular life phase, in which the ce...
Biofilms are a major form of microbial life in which cells form dense surface associated communities...
© 2016 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. Bacterial biofilms are formed by commu...
biofilm; social evolution; collective behavior; self-organization; cooperation. Biofilms are densely...
Bacterial biofilms are a structured population of bacteria adhered to a biotic or abiotic surface. B...
In natural environments bacteria predominantly exist as part of complex surface-associated communiti...
Bacteria are the smallest and most abundant form of life. They have traditionally been considered as...
Bacteria in the environment live predominantly as surface-attached communities, called biofilms, and...
Living organisms constantly interact with their habitats, selectively taking up compounds from their...
One common feature of biofilm development is the active dispersal of cells from the mature biofilm, ...
Biofilms — matrix-enclosed microbial accretions that adhere to biological or non-biological surfaces...
Understanding dispersal is a central aim of evolutionary ecology. Theoretical analyses of dispersal ...
Understanding dispersal is a central aim of evolutionary ecology. Theoretical analyses of dispersal ...
Unicellular bacterium in nature prefers to gather round to form a surface attached multi-cellular co...
Growing bacterial populations diversify to produce a number of competing lineages. In the Pseudomona...
In nature, bacteria alternate between two modes of growth: a unicellular life phase, in which the ce...
Biofilms are a major form of microbial life in which cells form dense surface associated communities...
© 2016 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. Bacterial biofilms are formed by commu...
biofilm; social evolution; collective behavior; self-organization; cooperation. Biofilms are densely...
Bacterial biofilms are a structured population of bacteria adhered to a biotic or abiotic surface. B...
In natural environments bacteria predominantly exist as part of complex surface-associated communiti...
Bacteria are the smallest and most abundant form of life. They have traditionally been considered as...
Bacteria in the environment live predominantly as surface-attached communities, called biofilms, and...
Living organisms constantly interact with their habitats, selectively taking up compounds from their...