Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3399245 Current Opinion in Microbiology 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Bacillus subtilis regulates its ability to differentiate into distinct, co-existing cell types in response to extracellular signaling molecules produced either by itself, or present in its environment. The production of molecules by B. subtilis cells, as well as their response to these signals, is not uniform across the population. There is specificity and heterogeneity both within genetically identical populations as well as at the strain-level and species-level. This review will discuss how extracellular signaling compounds influence B. subtilis multicellularity with regard to matrix-producing cannibal differentiation, germination, and swarming behavior, as well as the specificity of the quorum-sensing peptides ComX and CSF. It will also highlight how imaging mass spectrometry can aid in identifying signaling compounds and contribute to our understanding of the functional relationship between such compounds and multicellular behavior.

► Bacillus subtilis exists in multicellular communities composed of various cell types. ► The formation of these cell types can be regulated by extracellular compounds. ► We summarize recent results about how extracellular signals affect development.

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