reviewAnnual Review of Cell and Developmental BiologyJun 28, 2005Closed access

QUORUM SENSING: Cell-to-Cell Communication in Bacteria

Princeton University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Bacteria communicate with one another using chemical signal molecules. As in higher organisms, the information supplied by these molecules is critical for synchronizing the activities of large groups of cells. In bacteria, chemical communication involves producing, releasing, detecting, and responding to small hormone-like molecules termed autoinducers . This process, termed quorum sensing, allows bacteria to monitor the environment for other bacteria and to alter behavior on a population-wide scale in response to changes in the number and/or species present in a community. Most quorum-sensing-controlled processes are unproductive when undertaken by an individual bacterium acting alone but become beneficial…

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3,922
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Quorum sensing
  • Autoinducer
  • Multicellular organism
  • Prokaryote
  • Biology
  • Bacteria
  • Chemical communication
  • Eukaryote
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