Description

Book Synopsis
Bacteria as Multicellular Organisms is the first book devoted specifically to multicellular aspects of bacterial life, representing a new approach to bacteria. Contrary to conventional wisdom, which treats bacteria as autonomous single cells, this book shows how bacteria are sentient, interactive organisms with an unexpecteedly broad repertoire of chemical and physical mechanisms for signalling each other and organizing themselves into multicellular aggregates with novel properties. The book has been compiled from reports by specialists in a variety of disciplines from genetics and microbiology to environmental engineering and biotechnology. This interdisciplinary approach reflects the growing importance of bacteria as key experimental material for investigating phenomena common to many fields in contemporary science: communication, complexity, self-organization, and pattern formation. The impact of bacterial multicellularity will affect such diverse areas as evolutionary population bi

Trade Review
"Most microbiologists think of bacteria as exclusively unicellular organisms; this book provides a useful, alternative view of microbial life."--Choice "...one cannot end up but with a distinct and delightful "feeling for the multicellular microorganism" after reading this volume. The editors should be pleased with the results of their efforts, as should those--ardent followers and neophytes alike--who persue the pages of this text."--Science "The editors of this volume argue persuasively that the field of microbiology is undergoing major changes in research perspective. . . . This book is generally well written and is accessible to both specialists and a wider audience." --The Quarterly Review of Biology

Table of Contents
PART I: Conceptual Developments. 1: M. Dworkin: Multiculturalism vs. the single microbe,. 2: J.A. Shapiro: Multicellularity is the rule, not the exception: Lessons from E. coli colonies,. PART II: Intercellular Communication. 3: R.E. Ruhfel, B.A.B. Leonard, and G.M. Dunny: Pheromone-inducible conjugation in Enterococcus faecalis: mating interactions mediated by chemical signals and direct contact,. 4: P.V. Dunlap: N-acyl-L-homoserine lactone autoinducers in bacteria: unity and diversity expanding the prokaryotic paradigm: E. coli colonies teach us that multicellularity is the rule rather than the exception,. PART III: Multicellular Lifestyles. 5: D.G. Adams: Cyanobacteria,. 6: K.F. Chater and R. Losick: The mycelial life-style of Streptomyces Coelicolor A3(2) and its relatives,. 7: R. Belas: Proteus mirabilis and other swarming bacteria,. 8: L.J. Shimkets and M. Dworkin: Myxobacterial multicellularity,. 9: P.E. Kohlenbrander: Oral microbiology and coaggregation,. PART IV: Examining Multicellular Populations. 10: B. Hauer abd H. Eipel: Flow cytometry: a useful tool for analyzing bacterial populations cell by cell,. 11: N.K. Fry, L. Raskin, R. Sharp, E.W. Alm, B.K. Mobarry, and D.A Stahl: In situ analyses of microbial populations with molecular probes: the phylogenetic dimension,. PART V: A More Physical View of Bacterial Multicellularity. 12: N.H. Mendelson, B. Salhi, and C. Li: Physical and Genetic consequences of multicellularity in Bacillus subtilis,. 13: M. Matsushita: The formulation of colony patterns by a bacterial cell population,. 14: E. Ben-Jacob and I. Cohen: Cooperative formation of bacterial patterns,. 15: J.O Kessler and M.F. Wojciechowski: The collective behavior and dynamics of swimming bacteria,

Bacteria as Multicellular Organisms

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    £999.99

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    A Hardback by James A. Shapiro, Martin Dworkin

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      View other formats and editions of Bacteria as Multicellular Organisms by James A. Shapiro

      Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
      Publication Date: 2/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780195091595, 978-0195091595
      ISBN10: 0195091590

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Bacteria as Multicellular Organisms is the first book devoted specifically to multicellular aspects of bacterial life, representing a new approach to bacteria. Contrary to conventional wisdom, which treats bacteria as autonomous single cells, this book shows how bacteria are sentient, interactive organisms with an unexpecteedly broad repertoire of chemical and physical mechanisms for signalling each other and organizing themselves into multicellular aggregates with novel properties. The book has been compiled from reports by specialists in a variety of disciplines from genetics and microbiology to environmental engineering and biotechnology. This interdisciplinary approach reflects the growing importance of bacteria as key experimental material for investigating phenomena common to many fields in contemporary science: communication, complexity, self-organization, and pattern formation. The impact of bacterial multicellularity will affect such diverse areas as evolutionary population bi

      Trade Review
      "Most microbiologists think of bacteria as exclusively unicellular organisms; this book provides a useful, alternative view of microbial life."--Choice "...one cannot end up but with a distinct and delightful "feeling for the multicellular microorganism" after reading this volume. The editors should be pleased with the results of their efforts, as should those--ardent followers and neophytes alike--who persue the pages of this text."--Science "The editors of this volume argue persuasively that the field of microbiology is undergoing major changes in research perspective. . . . This book is generally well written and is accessible to both specialists and a wider audience." --The Quarterly Review of Biology

      Table of Contents
      PART I: Conceptual Developments. 1: M. Dworkin: Multiculturalism vs. the single microbe,. 2: J.A. Shapiro: Multicellularity is the rule, not the exception: Lessons from E. coli colonies,. PART II: Intercellular Communication. 3: R.E. Ruhfel, B.A.B. Leonard, and G.M. Dunny: Pheromone-inducible conjugation in Enterococcus faecalis: mating interactions mediated by chemical signals and direct contact,. 4: P.V. Dunlap: N-acyl-L-homoserine lactone autoinducers in bacteria: unity and diversity expanding the prokaryotic paradigm: E. coli colonies teach us that multicellularity is the rule rather than the exception,. PART III: Multicellular Lifestyles. 5: D.G. Adams: Cyanobacteria,. 6: K.F. Chater and R. Losick: The mycelial life-style of Streptomyces Coelicolor A3(2) and its relatives,. 7: R. Belas: Proteus mirabilis and other swarming bacteria,. 8: L.J. Shimkets and M. Dworkin: Myxobacterial multicellularity,. 9: P.E. Kohlenbrander: Oral microbiology and coaggregation,. PART IV: Examining Multicellular Populations. 10: B. Hauer abd H. Eipel: Flow cytometry: a useful tool for analyzing bacterial populations cell by cell,. 11: N.K. Fry, L. Raskin, R. Sharp, E.W. Alm, B.K. Mobarry, and D.A Stahl: In situ analyses of microbial populations with molecular probes: the phylogenetic dimension,. PART V: A More Physical View of Bacterial Multicellularity. 12: N.H. Mendelson, B. Salhi, and C. Li: Physical and Genetic consequences of multicellularity in Bacillus subtilis,. 13: M. Matsushita: The formulation of colony patterns by a bacterial cell population,. 14: E. Ben-Jacob and I. Cohen: Cooperative formation of bacterial patterns,. 15: J.O Kessler and M.F. Wojciechowski: The collective behavior and dynamics of swimming bacteria,

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