Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3399298 | Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Bacteria sense and respond to light, a fundamental environmental factor, by employing highly evolved machineries and mechanisms. Cellular systems exist to harness light energy usefully as in phototrophic bacteria, to combat photo-oxidative damage stemming from the highly reactive species generated on absorption of light energy, and to link the light stimulus to DNA repair, taxis, development, and virulence. Recent findings on the genetic response to light in nonphototrophic bacteria highlight the ingenious transcriptional regulatory mechanisms and the panoply of factors that have evolved to perceive and transmit the signal, and to bring about finely tuned gene expression.
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Authors
Montserrat ElĂas-Arnanz, S Padmanabhan, Francisco J Murillo,