Cell-cell communication enables bacteria to coordinate their behavior through the production, recognition, and response to chemical signals produced by their microbial neighbors. An important example of coordinated behavior in bacteria is biofilm formation, where individual cells organize into highly complex, matrix-encased communities that differentiate into distinct cell types and divide labor among individual cells. Bacteria rely on environmental cues to influence biofilm development, including chemical cues produced by other microbes. A multitude of recent studies have demonstrated that natural-product antibiotics at subinhibitory concentrations can impact biofilm formation in neighboring microbes, supporting the hypothesis that these compounds may have evolved as signaling molecules that mediate cell-cell interactions. In this review we discuss the role of antibiotics in modulating biofilm formation and interspecies communication in bacteria.
Keywords: bacterial interactions; biofilm formation; cell–cell communication; natural products; specialized metabolites.
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