The Evolution of microbial lifeparadigm changes in microbiology

  1. Ricard Guerrero i Moreno 1
  2. Mercedes Berlanga Herranz 1
  1. 1 Universitat de Barcelona
    info

    Universitat de Barcelona

    Barcelona, España

    ROR https://ror.org/021018s57

Journal:
Contributions to Science

ISSN: 1575-6343

Year of publication: 2009

Volume: 5

Issue: 1

Pages: 55-61

Type: Article

More publications in: Contributions to Science

Abstract

Bacteria are not as structurally or functionally simple as we believed. Bacteria live and die in complex communities that in many ways resemble multicellular organisms. The release of pheromones induces bacteria in a population to respond in concert by changing patterns of gene expression, a phenomenon called “quorum sensing”. Bacteria want what all other organisms want: to grow, to eat, to reproduce themselves; if their surrounding conditions are good, they will stay; if things are better somewhere else, they will move; if threatened, they will escape; and if the world around them changes, they must change. These are the basics of life: access to nutrients, consumption of nutrients for reproduction, dispersion, escape from predators, and differentiation. Today, it is common knowl- edge that the majority of microorganisms play essential roles in maintaining life on Earth. We, and our fellow “macrobes”, are ultimately reliant on the manifold activities of the “invisible” microbial world. The miniscule size of its members belies their tre- mendous importance.