Literature DB >> 20721987

Bacterial olfaction.

Reindert Nijland1, J Grant Burgess.   

Abstract

Sensing their environment is a crucial ability of all life forms. In higher eukaryotes the sensing of airborne volatile compounds, or olfaction, is well developed. In plants, slime moulds and yeast there is also compelling evidence that these organisms can smell their environment and respond accordingly. Here we show that bacteria are also capable of olfaction. Bacillus licheniformis was able to sense airborne volatile metabolites produced by neighbouring bacterial cultures and cells could respond to this chemical information in a coordinated way. When Bacillus licheniformis was grown in a microtitre plate adjacent to a bacterial culture of the same or a different species, growing in complex medium, biofilm formation and pigment production were elicited by volatile molecules. A weaker response occurred in increasingly distant wells. The emitted volatile molecule was identified as ammonia. These data demonstrate that B. licheniformis has evolved the ability collect information about its environment from the surrounding air and physiologically respond to it in a manner similar to olfaction. This is the first time that a behavioural response triggered by odorant molecules received through the gas phase is described in bacteria.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20721987     DOI: 10.1002/biot.201000174

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biotechnol J        ISSN: 1860-6768            Impact factor:   4.677


  17 in total

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6.  Management of Smell Dysfunction.

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7.  Production of ammonia as a low-cost and long-distance antibiotic strategy by Streptomyces species.

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8.  Artificial Sweeteners Negatively Regulate Pathogenic Characteristics of Two Model Gut Bacteria, E. coli and E. faecalis.

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9.  Concentration-dependent activity of antibiotics in natural environments.

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10.  Volatile organic compounds produced by the phytopathogenic bacterium Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria 85-10.

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