학술논문

Microbial chemical signaling: a current perspective.
Document Type
Article
Source
Critical Reviews in Microbiology. Aug2012, Vol. 38 Issue 3, p217-249. 33p.
Subject
*MICROORGANISMS
*QUORUM sensing
*GENE expression in bacteria
*MICROBIAL population genetics
*CELLULAR signal transduction
*PATHOLOGICAL physiology
Language
ISSN
1040-841X
Abstract
Communication among microorganisms is mediated through quorum sensing. The latter is defined as cell-density linked, coordinated gene expression in microbial populations as a response to threshold signal concentrations followed by induction of a synchronized population response. This phenomenon is used by a variety of microbes to optimize their survival in a constantly challenging, dynamic milieu, by correlating individual cellular functions to community-based requirements. The synthesis, secretion, and perception of quorum-sensing molecules and their target response play a pivotal role in quorum sensing and are tightly controlled by complex, multilayered and interconnected signal transduction pathways that regulate diverse cellular functions. Quorum sensing exemplifies interactive social behavior innate to the microbial world that controls features such as, virulence, biofilm maturation, antibiotic resistance, swarming motility, and conjugal plasmid transfer. Over the past two decades, studies have been performed to rationalize bacterial cell-to-cell communication mediated by structurally and functionally diverse small molecules. This review describes the theoretical aspects of cellular and quorum-sensing mechanisms that affect microbial physiology and pathobiology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]