Bacterial Ventures into Multicellularity: Collectivism through Individuality


Date

2015-06-03

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Data

Abstract

Multicellular eukaryotes can perform functions that exceed the possibilities of an individual cell. These functions emerge through interactions between differentiated cells that are precisely arranged in space. Bacteria also form multicellular collectives that consist of differentiated but genetically identical cells. How does the functionality of these collectives depend on the spatial arrangement of the differentiated bacteria? In a previous issue of PLOS Biology, van Gestel and colleagues reported an elegant example of how the spatial arrangement of differentiated cells gives rise to collective behavior in Bacillus subtilus colonies, further demonstrating the similarity of bacterial collectives to higher multicellular organisms.

Publication status

published

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Book title

Journal / series

Volume

13 (6)

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

PLOS

Event

Edition / version

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Organisational unit

03743 - Ackermann, Martin / Ackermann, Martin check_circle

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