Authors
Carey D Nadell, Joao B Xavier, Kevin R Foster
Publication date
2008/12/3
Source
FEMS microbiology reviews
Volume
33
Issue
1
Pages
206-224
Publisher
Federation of European Microbiological Societies
Description
Biofilms are densely packed communities of microbial cells that grow on surfaces and surround themselves with secreted polymers. Many bacterial species form biofilms, and their study has revealed them to be complex and diverse. The structural and physiological complexity of biofilms has led to the idea that they are coordinated and cooperative groups, analogous to multicellular organisms. We evaluate this idea by addressing the findings of microbiologists from the perspective of sociobiology, including theories of collective behavior (self-organization) and social evolution. This yields two main conclusions. First, the appearance of organization in biofilms can emerge without active coordination. That is, biofilm properties such as phenotypic differentiation, species stratification and channel formation do not necessarily require that cells communicate with one another using specialized signaling molecules. Second …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
CD Nadell, JB Xavier, KR Foster - FEMS microbiology reviews, 2008