The Shank laboratory studies the chemical and physical interactions of microbes with each other and their hosts. Microbes live everywhere, and their activities can have profound impacts on their hosts as well as on ecosystem‐level processes. How microbes interact within these communities, however, remains largely unknown. We are fascinated by the idea that microbes are able to generate and secrete chemical cues (known as specialized or secondary metabolites) that can act as interspecies signals to influence the physiology and metabolism of their microbial neighbors, and thus contribute to the stability and functioning of complex microbial communities. Our research dissects these microbial interactions using traditional microbiology, fluores...
Microorganisms have a long track record as important sources of novel bioactive natural products, pa...
AbstractSome of the most transformative discoveries promising to enable the resolution of this centu...
Microbial interaction is an integral component of microbial ecology studies, yet the role, extent, a...
The ability of microbes to secrete bioactive chemical signals into their environment has been known ...
Microorganisms exist in dynamic networks that catalyze reactions and respond to stimuli. They organi...
The co-existence of different microbial species in one habitat is prerequisite for many ecosystem pr...
Microbes are everywhere. One teaspoon of soil contains an estimated 100 million to one billion bacte...
In recent years, research in the field of Microbial Ecology has revealed the tremendous diversity an...
Soil bacteria live in complex communities that include bacteria, fungi, and plants, collectivelyrefe...
A key challenge in microbiome research is to predict the functionality of microbial communities base...
Microorganisms are present in nearly every niche on Earth and mainly do not exist solely but form co...
In microbial communities, bacteria chemically and physically interact with one another. Some of thes...
AbstractThe microorganism–microorganism or microorganism–host interactions are the key strategy to c...
Microbial activities are most often shaped by interactions between co-existing microbes within mixed...
Multicellular life evolved in the presence of microorganisms and formed complex associations with th...
Microorganisms have a long track record as important sources of novel bioactive natural products, pa...
AbstractSome of the most transformative discoveries promising to enable the resolution of this centu...
Microbial interaction is an integral component of microbial ecology studies, yet the role, extent, a...
The ability of microbes to secrete bioactive chemical signals into their environment has been known ...
Microorganisms exist in dynamic networks that catalyze reactions and respond to stimuli. They organi...
The co-existence of different microbial species in one habitat is prerequisite for many ecosystem pr...
Microbes are everywhere. One teaspoon of soil contains an estimated 100 million to one billion bacte...
In recent years, research in the field of Microbial Ecology has revealed the tremendous diversity an...
Soil bacteria live in complex communities that include bacteria, fungi, and plants, collectivelyrefe...
A key challenge in microbiome research is to predict the functionality of microbial communities base...
Microorganisms are present in nearly every niche on Earth and mainly do not exist solely but form co...
In microbial communities, bacteria chemically and physically interact with one another. Some of thes...
AbstractThe microorganism–microorganism or microorganism–host interactions are the key strategy to c...
Microbial activities are most often shaped by interactions between co-existing microbes within mixed...
Multicellular life evolved in the presence of microorganisms and formed complex associations with th...
Microorganisms have a long track record as important sources of novel bioactive natural products, pa...
AbstractSome of the most transformative discoveries promising to enable the resolution of this centu...
Microbial interaction is an integral component of microbial ecology studies, yet the role, extent, a...