Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Cannibalism by Sporulating Bacteria

572

Citations

13

References

2003

Year

Abstract

Spore formation by the bacterium Bacillus subtilis is an elaborate developmental process that is triggered by nutrient limitation. Here we report that cells that have entered the pathway to sporulate produce and export a killing factor and a signaling protein that act cooperatively to block sister cells from sporulating and to cause them to lyse. The sporulating cells feed on the nutrients thereby released, which allows them to keep growing rather than to complete morphogenesis. We propose that sporulation is a stress-response pathway of last resort and that B. subtilis delays a commitment to spore formation by cannibalizing its siblings.

References

YearCitations

1997

3.7K

1965

1.2K

2001

1.1K

1991

862

2000

299

2002

244

1986

168

1999

165

1975

151

1994

150

Page 1